cover image Mythmaker: The Life and Work of George Lucas

Mythmaker: The Life and Work of George Lucas

John Baxter. William Morrow & Company, $27.5 (450pp) ISBN 978-0-380-97833-5

An astute look behind the myths of the man and his work, this intelligent biography delivers a mixed verdict on director/ producer George Lucas's films: ""Thanks to him... American popular culture had been immeasurably enriched in technique, widened in scope, but cheapened in content,"" writes Baxter, a biographer of Fellini, Spielberg, Kubrick and Woody Allen. ""In his hands, cinema became synonymous in sensibility and style with the comic book, the hamburger, the soda."" Yet Lucas fans won't mind, and may not even notice, Baxter's quietly devastating criticism as they feast on his detailed behind-the-scenes account of the making and marketing of American Graffiti, Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Willow and assorted sequels. Baxter presents the merchandising billionaire (who once observed that Star Wars ""was designed around toys"") as a socially inept director who finds the Hollywood filmmaking process boring and irritating. At the same time, Lucas has merely dabbled in what he claimed was his lifelong ambition of making inexpensive, personal, even experimental films as an alternative to the Hollywood system. In addition to offering an intense scrutiny of Lucas's creative process, this perceptive bio is peppered with gossipy glimpses into Lucas's rivalry with Spielberg and affair with Linda Ronstadt, details of Carrie Fisher's drug use, Francis Ford Coppola's hectic sex life and the battle waged by a new breed of directors to gain the upper hand over studios and investors in financially controlling their own films. (Oct.)