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Star Wars: Episode I –
The Phantom Menace
Directed by George Lucas
Produced by Rick McCallum
Written by George Lucas
Starring
Music by John Williams
Cinematography David Tattersall
Edited by
Production
company
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • May 16, 1999 (Los Angeles)
  • May 19, 1999 (United States)
133 minutes[1][a]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $115 million[2]
Box office $1.027 billion[2]

Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace is a 1999 American epicspace opera film written and directed by George Lucas, produced by Lucasfilm and distributed by 20th Century Fox. It is the first installment in the Star Wars prequel trilogy and stars Liam Neeson, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Jake Lloyd, Ian McDiarmid, Anthony Daniels, Kenny Baker, Pernilla August, and Frank Oz. The film is set 32 years before the original film, and follows Jedi KnightQui-Gon Jinn and his apprenticeObi-Wan Kenobi as they protect Queen Amidala in hopes of securing a peaceful end to a large-scale interplanetary trade dispute. Joined by Anakin Skywalker—a young slave with unusually strong natural powers of the Force—they simultaneously contend with the mysterious return of the Sith.

Lucas began production of this film after he determined that film special effects had advanced to the level he wanted for the fourth film in the saga. Filming started on June 26, 1997, at locations including Leavesden Film Studios and the Tunisian desert. Its visual effects included extensive use of computer-generated imagery (CGI); many of its characters and settings were completely computerized. The film was Lucas' first directorial effort after a 22-year hiatus following Star Wars in 1977.

The Phantom Menace was released in theaters on May 19, 1999, almost 16 years after the premiere of the previous Star Wars film, Return of the Jedi. The film's premiere was extensively covered by media and was greatly anticipated because of the large cultural following the Star Wars saga had cultivated. It received mixed reviews; critics praised the visuals, action sequences, John Williams' musical score and some of the performances, but criticized the screenplay, characterization, and Ahmed Best and Jake Lloyd's performances (as Jar Jar Binks and Anakin Skywalker respectively). It grossed more than $924.3 million worldwide during its initial theatrical run, becoming the highest-grossing film of 1999, the second-highest-grossing film worldwide and in North America (behind Titanic), as well as the highest-grossing Star Wars film at the time. A 3D reissue, which earned an additional $102.7 million at the box office and brought the film's overall worldwide takings to over $1 billion, was released in February 2012. The film was followed by two sequels, Attack of the Clones in 2002 and Revenge of the Sith in 2005.[3]

  • 3Production
  • 5Release
  • 7Reception
  • 10References

Plot[edit]

The Trade Federation upsets order in the Galactic Republic by blockading the planet Naboo in preparation for a full-scale invasion. The Republic's leader, Supreme Chancellor Valorum, dispatches Jedi MasterQui-Gon Jinn and his apprentice, Obi-Wan Kenobi, to negotiate with Trade Federation Viceroy Nute Gunray. Darth Sidious, a Sith Lord and the Trade Federation's secret benefactor, orders the Viceroy to kill the Jedi and begin their invasion with an army of battle droids. The Jedi escape and flee to Naboo. During the invasion, Qui-Gon saves the life of a clumsy Gungan outcast, Jar Jar Binks, from being run over by a droid transport. Indebted to Qui-Gon, Jar Jar leads the Jedi to Otoh Gunga, an underwater city of Naboo. The Jedi try to persuade the Gungan leader, Boss Nass, to help the planet's surface dwellers, but are unsuccessful. However, the Jedi manage to obtain Jar Jar's guidance and underwater transport to Theed, the capital city of Naboo; they narrowly avoid getting eaten by sea monsters on the way. They rescue Naboo's queen, Padmé Amidala, and escape from the blockaded planet on her Royal Starship, intending to reach the Republic capital planet of Coruscant.

Amidala's ship is damaged as they pass the Federation blockade and the hyperdrive is caught in the crossfire, rendering it useless. They land for repairs on the outlying desert planet of Tatooine, situated beyond the Republic's jurisdiction. Qui-Gon,Jar Jar,astromech droidR2-D2, and Padmé—disguised as one of her handmaidens—visit the settlement of Mos Espa to purchase spare parts at a junk shop. They meet the shop's owner, Watto, and his nine-year-old slave, Anakin Skywalker, a gifted pilot and engineer who has built a protocol droid called C-3PO. Qui-Gon senses a strong presence of the Force within Anakin, and is convinced that he is the prophesied 'Chosen One'. Unable to buy the required hyperdrive parts due to the Republic's currency being worthless on Tatooine, Qui-Gon wagers both the parts and Anakin's freedom with Watto in a podrace. Anakin wins, and joins the group to be trained as a Jedi, leaving behind his mother, Shmi. En route to their starship, Qui-Gon encounters Darth Maul, Darth Sidious' apprentice, who intends to capture Amidala. A duel ensues, but Qui-Gon quickly disengages and escapes onboard the starship.

Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan escort Amidala to Coruscant so that she can plead her people's case to Chancellor Valorum and the Galactic Senate. Qui-Gon asks the Jedi Council for permission to train Anakin as a Jedi, but the Council refuses, concerned that Anakin is vulnerable to the dark side of the Force. Undaunted, Qui-Gon vows to take up Anakin as his new disciple. Meanwhile, Naboo's senator Palpatine persuades Amidala to call for a vote of no confidence in Chancellor Valorum to elect a more capable leader to resolve the crisis. Though she is successful in pushing for the vote, Amidala is frustrated with the corruption in the Senate and decides to return to Naboo. Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan are ordered by the Jedi Council to accompany the queen, and investigate the return of the Sith, whom they had believed to be extinct.

On Naboo, Padmé reveals herself to the Gungans as Queen Amidala and persuades them to join in an alliance against the Trade Federation. Despite being inept at combat, Jar Jar is promoted to general and joins his people in a battle against the droid army, while Padmé leads the search for Viceroy Gunray in Theed. During a battle in the starship hangar, Qui-Gon tells Anakin to wait in the cockpit of a vacant starfighter. Anakin inadvertently triggers its autopilot, joining the battle against the Federation droid control ship in space. Anakin blunders into the hangar of the droid control ship and causes its destruction from within before escaping, deactivating the droid army in the process. Meanwhile, Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan battle Darth Maul, who mortally wounds Qui-Gon, but is then bisected by Obi-Wan and falls down a pit.

As he lays dying, Qui-Gon requests that Obi-Wan train Anakin. Palpatine is elected as the new supreme chancellor, and Gunray is arrested. Yoda promotes Obi-Wan to the rank of Jedi Knight and reluctantly accepts Anakin as Obi-Wan's apprentice. Padmé presents a gift of thanks to Boss Nass and the Gungans during a celebratory parade.

Cast[edit]

  • Liam Neeson as Qui-Gon Jinn: A Jedi Master who discovers Anakin and insists that the boy be trained as a Jedi, despite the Jedi Council's refusal to do so. Lucas originally wanted to cast an American actor in the role, but cast Neeson (who is Northern Irish) because he considered that Neeson had great skills and presence. Lucas said Neeson was a 'master actor, who the other actors will look up to, who has got the qualities of strength that the character demands'.[4]
  • Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi: Qui-Gon's Jedi Padawan, who holds his master in high regard but questions his motives at times. McGregor was cast from a shortlist of fifty actors, all of whom had to be compared to pictures of young Alec Guinness, who portrayed the elderly Obi-Wan, to make a believable younger version.[5] McGregor had a vocal coach to help his voice sound closer to Guinness'. He also studied several of Guinness' performances, from his early work and the original Star Wars films.[4]
  • Natalie Portman as Queen Padmé Amidala: The fourteen-year-old Queen of Naboo, who hopes to protect her planet from a blockade invasion made by the Trade Federation. Over 200 actresses auditioned for the role.[6] The Production notes stated; 'The role required a young woman who could be believable as the ruler of that planet, but at the same time be vulnerable and open'. Portman was chosen especially for her performances in Léon: The Professional (1994) and Beautiful Girls (1996), which impressed Lucas.[4] He stated, 'I was looking for someone who was young, strong, along the lines of Leia [and] Natalie embodied all those traits and more'.[4] Portman was unfamiliar with Star Wars before being cast,[4] but was enthusiastic about being cast as a character she expected to become a role model. Portman said, 'It was wonderful playing a young queen with so much power. I think it will be good for young women to see a strong woman of action who is also smart and a leader.'[7]
  • Jake Lloyd as Anakin Skywalker: A nine-year-old slave boy and a skilled pilot who dreams of becoming a Jedi. Hundreds of actors were tested across the UK, Ireland, Canada and the United States[4] before the producers settled on Lloyd who Lucas considered met his requirements of 'a good actor, enthusiastic and very energetic'. Producer Rick McCallum said that Lloyd was 'smart, mischievous and loves anything mechanical—just like Anakin.'[8]
  • Ian McDiarmid as Senator Palpatine / Darth Sidious: A Senator of Naboo who is eventually elected as Supreme Chancellor of the Galactic Republic. McDiarmid was surprised when Lucas approached him sixteen years after Return of the Jedi to reprise the role of Palpatine because he had assumed that a younger actor would play the role in the prequel films.[9]
  • Anthony Daniels as the voice of C-3PO: A protocol droid built by Anakin. He lacks a metal covering in this film; R2-D2 humourously refers to it as being 'naked'. A puppeteer dressed in a color closely matching the background—in a manner similar to the Japanese puppet theatre Bunraku—manipulated a skeletal C-3PO figure attached to his front while Daniels read his lines off-camera. The puppeteer was erased from the film during post-production.[8][10]
  • Kenny Baker as R2-D2: An astromech droid that saves Queen Amidala's ship when other astro droids fail. Before the film's production started, fans campaigned on the Internet to retain Baker as R2-D2; Lucas replied that the actor would reprise the role. Baker is used for scenes where R2-D2 bends forwards and backwards and wobbles from side-to-side. Robots and a digital model were used in other shots.[11]
  • Pernilla August as Shmi Skywalker: Anakin's mother, who is concerned for her son's future and allows him to leave with the Jedi. August, a veteran of Swedish cinema, was chosen after auditioning with Liam Neeson. She was afraid of being rejected because of her accent.[12]
  • Frank Oz as the voice of Yoda: The centuries-old leader of the Jedi Council who is apprehensive about allowing Anakin to be trained. Yoda was mostly portrayed as a puppet designed by Nick Dudman based on Stuart Freeborn's original design. Oz controlled the puppet's mouth and other parts were controlled by puppeteers using remote controls.[12] Lucas fitted Yoda's filming around Oz's schedule as he finished and promoted In & Out.[13] A computer-generated Yoda is featured in two distant shots. Warwick Davis (who played the part of the Ewok Wicket W. Warrick in Return of the Jedi in 1983) portrays him in the scene where Obi-Wan becomes a Jedi Knight.[14] Lucas said he originally wanted to use a full-time digital Yoda, but the attempts did not work well enough at the time. On the Blu-ray release of The Phantom Menace, which was also used for the 3D reissue, a CG Yoda similar to the one from the other prequels is used instead.[15]
  • Ahmed Best as Jar Jar Binks: A clumsy Gungan exiled from his home and taken in by Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan. Best was hired after casting director Robin Gurland saw him on a Stomp performance in San Francisco.[8] Best was originally intended to provide motion capture data but his offer to voice the character was accepted. On the set, to provide references for the actors, Best was clothed in a suit made of foam and latex and a headpiece. Best's filmed performance was later replaced with the computer-generated character.[12] Best frequently improvised movements to make Jar Jar look as clumsy and comedic as possible.[8]
  • Oliver Ford Davies as Sio Bibble: The Governor of Naboo.
  • Hugh Quarshie as Captain Panaka: Queen Amidala's Chief of Security at Theed Palace.
  • Samuel L. Jackson as Mace Windu: A high-ranking member of the Jedi Council who also opposes the training of Anakin Skywalker.
  • Ray Park as Darth Maul: Darth Sidious' Sith apprentice who uses a double-bladed lightsaber.
    • Peter Serafinowicz as the voice of Darth Maul.
  • Terence Stamp as Supreme Chancellor Finis Valorum: The Supreme Chancellor of the Galactic Republic who commissions Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon to negotiate with the Trade Federation Viceroy. Lucas described the character as a 'good man but he's beleaguered—a bit like [Bill] Clinton'.[16]
  • Keira Knightley as Sabé: One of Queen Amidala's handmaidens who serves as her decoy throughout the majority of the film.
  • Silas Carson as Nute Gunray: The Viceroy of the Trade Federation who leads Naboo's invasion and tries to force Queen Amidala to sign a treaty to legitimise their occupation of the planet. Carson also portrays three minor characters: Jedi Master Ki-Adi-Mundi, Trade Federation Senator Lott Dod, and an ill-fated pilot (the role for which Carson originally auditioned).[17]

Additionally, Brian Blessed, Andy Secombe, and Lewis MacLeod voiced Boss Nass, the leader of the Gungan tribe who allies with the Naboo surface dwellers, Watto, a junk dealer on Tatooine who owns Anakin and his mother as slaves, and Sebulba, an aggressive, scheming podracer who is Anakin's main rival at the Boonta Eve podrace, respectively. Greg Proops and Scott Capurro voiced Fode and Beed, respectively, the two-headed announcer of the Boonta Eve Race. Matthew Wood appears as Twi'lek Bib Fortuna, alongside a CGI Jabba the Hutt who is voiced by unknown actor. Dominic West plays the role of a Naboo guard. Sofia Coppola appears as Saché, one of Amidala's handmaidens, and Ralph Brown appears as Ric Olié, the Queen's starship pilot. Christian Simpson appears as Lieutenant Gavyn Sykes.[18]

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

While writing the original Star Wars, Lucas realized the story was too vast in scope to be covered in one film. The original film was written to introduce a wider story arc that could be told in sequels on the chance that it became successful, so Star Wars evolved from the first film in the series to the first episode of the saga's second trilogy.[19][20] Lucas eventually negotiated a contract that allowed him to make two sequels, and over time had created an elaborate backstory to aid his writing process.[21] While writing The Empire Strikes Back, Lucas considered directions in which to take the story. In the original trilogy, Darth Vader was revealed to have been Anakin Skywalker, a once-powerful Jedi Knight, and a traitor to the Jedi Order.[22] With this backstory in place, Lucas decided the movies would work best as a trilogy.[23] In the final act of the trilogy's final episode, Return of the Jedi, Vader is ultimately redeemed through an act of sacrifice for Luke. This was in 1983, more than six years since the release of Star Wars. Lucas admitted to being 'burned out' and announced he would take a break from working on the saga.[24]

Throughout the 1980s, George Lucas remarked he had no desire to return to Star Wars and had unofficially canceled his sequel trilogy by the time of Return of the Jedi. Because Lucas had developed most of the backstory, the idea of prequels continued to fascinate him.[25] In the early 1990s, Star Wars saw a resurgence in popularity in the wake of Dark Horse's comic line and Timothy Zahn's trilogy of novels. Lucas saw there was still a large audience for his idea of a prequel trilogy and with the development of special effects generated with computer-generated imagery (CGI), Lucas considered returning to his saga and directing the film.[26] In 1993, it was announced in Variety and other sources that he would be making the prequels. Lucas began outlining the story; Anakin Skywalker rather than Obi-Wan Kenobi would be the protagonist and the series would be a tragedy examining Darth Vader's origins. A relic of the original outline was that Anakin would, like his son, grow up on Tatooine.[27] Lucas also began to change the prequels' timeline relative to the original series; instead of filling in the tangential history, they would form the beginning of a long story that started with Anakin's childhood and ended with his death. This was the final step toward turning the franchise into a saga.[28]

Phantom Menace Download Game

George Lucas began writing the new Star Wars trilogy on November 1, 1994. The screenplay of Star Wars was adapted from Lucas' 15-page outline that was written in 1976, which he designed to help him keep track of the characters' backstories and events that occurred before the original trilogy.[29] Anakin was first written as a twelve-year-old, but Lucas reduced his age to nine because he felt the lower age would better fit the plot point of Anakin being affected by his mother's separation from him. Eventually, Anakin's younger age led Lucas to rewrite his participation in the movie's major scenes.[30] The film's working title was The Beginning;[29] Lucas later revealed that its true title was The Phantom Menace; a reference to Palpatine hiding his true identity as an evil Sith Lord behind the facade of a well-intentioned public servant.[31]

The larger budget and possibilities opened up by the use of digital effects made Lucas 'think about a much grander, more epic scale—'which is what I wanted Star Wars to be'.[32] The story ended with five simultaneous, ongoing plots, one leading to another. The central plot is Palpatine's intent to become Chancellor, which leads to the Trade Federation's attack on Naboo, the Jedi being sent there, Anakin being met along the way, and the rise of the Sith Lords. As with the original trilogy, Lucas intended The Phantom Menace to illustrate several themes throughout the narrative. Duality is a frequent theme; Amidala is a queen who passes as a handmaiden, Palpatine plays on both sides of the war, among others. 'Balance' is frequently suggested; Anakin is supposedly 'the one' chosen to bring balance to the Force—Lucas said, 'Anakin needed to have a mother, Obi-Wan needed a Master, Darth Sidious needed an apprentice' as without interaction and dialogue 'you wouldn't have drama'.[33]

In November 2015, Ron Howard confirmed that he, Robert Zemeckis and Steven Spielberg were approached by Lucas to direct The Phantom Menace. All three approached directors told Lucas that he should direct the film, as they each found the project 'too daunting.'[34]

Pre-production and design[edit]

Before Lucas had started writing, his producing partner Rick McCallum was preparing for the film. McCallum stated that his experience with The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles led to many of his decisions on The Phantom Menace, such as long-term deals with actors and soundstages, the employment of recent graduates with no film experience, and the creation of sets and landscapes with digital technology. In April 1994, McCallum started searching for artists in art, architecture and design schools, and in mid-year he began location scouting with production designer Gavin Bocquet. Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) art director Doug Chiang impressed McCallum the most and was hired as the design director.[35][36] Art development on the film began in January 1995.[37]

Within three to four months of Lucas beginning the writing process, Chiang and his design team started a two-year process of reviewing thousands of designs for the film.[38] Chiang stated that Lucas intended Episode I to be stylistically different from the other Star Wars films; it would be 'richer and more like a period piece, since it was the history leading up to A New Hope.' The three planets on which the story takes place—some with varied environments such as the human and Gungan cities of Naboo and three buildings in Coruscant. With the exception of the Gungan city, which had an art nouveau-inspired visual, these locations would be given distinctive looks with some basis in the real world. The concept drawings of Ralph McQuarrie for the original trilogy served as the basis for Mos Espa—which was also inspired by old Tunisian hotels and buildings and had touches such as a market place to differentiate it from A New Hope's Mos Eisley—and Coruscant, in particular a metropolis design which became the basis for the Senate.[39] Bocquet would later develop the work of Chiang's team and design the interiors, translating the concepts into construction blueprints with environments and architectural styles that had some basis in reality 'to give the audience something to key into.'[40] Some elements were directly inspired by the original trilogy; Lucas described the battle droids as predecessors to the stormtroopers. Chiang uses that orientation to base the droids on the Imperial soldiers, only in the same style of stylized and elongated features seen in tribal African art.[32]

Terryl Whitlatch, who had a background on zoology and anatomy, was in charge of creature design. Many of the aliens are hybrids, combining features of real animals. At times entire food chains were developed even though only a small percentage of them would appear in the film. Whitlatch also designed detailed skeletons for the major characters and facial muscles on Jar Jar Binks as a reference for ILM's animators. Each creature would reflect its environment; those on Naboo were more beautiful because the planet is 'lush and more animal-friendly', Tatooine has rough-looking creatures 'with weather-beaten leathery skin to protect them from the harsh desert elements', and Coruscant has bipedal, human-looking aliens.[41]

Qui-Gon Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi dueling Darth Maul. Lucas wanted the lightsaber battles to be fast and more intense, depicting the Jedi in their prime. This scene was highly praised by critics and audiences.

Stunt coordinator Nick Gillard was recruited to create a new Jedi fighting style for the prequel trilogy. Gillard likened the lightsaber battles to a chess game 'with every move being a check'. Because of their short-range weapons, Gillard thought the Jedi would have had to develop a fighting style that merged every swordfighting style, such as kendo and other kenjutsu styles, with other swinging techniques, such as tennis swings and tree-chopping. While training Liam Neeson and Ewan McGregor, Gillard wrote a sequence which lasted around 60 seconds and intended to be around five or six sequences per fight.[42] Lucas later referred to the Jedi as 'negotiators' rather than high-casualty soldiers. The preference of hand-to-hand combat was intended to give a spiritual and intellectual role to the Jedi.[42] Because Gillard thought the stunt jumps with the actors and stuntmen dangling from wires did not look realistic, air rams were used to propel them into the air instead.[43]

Lucas decided to make elaborate costumes because the film's society was more sophisticated than the one depicted in the original trilogy. Designer Trisha Biggar and her team created over 1,000 costumes that were inspired by various cultures.[44] Biggar worked closely with concept designer Iain McCaig to create a color palette for the inhabitants of each world: Tatooine followed A New Hope with sun-bleached sand colors, Coruscant had grays, browns and blacks, and Naboo had green and gold for humans while Gungans wore 'a leathery look, like their skin'. The Jedi costumes followed the tradition from the original film;[45] Obi-Wan's costume was inspired by the costume that was worn by Guinness. Lucas said he and Biggar would look at the conceptual art to 'translat[e] all of these designs into cloth and fabric and materials that would actually work and not look silly'. Biggar also consulted Gillard to ensure the costumes would accommodate action scenes, and consulted the creature department to find which fabrics 'wouldn't wear too heavily' on the alien skins. A huge wardrobe department was set up at Leavesden Film Studios to create over 250 costumes for the main actors and 5,000 for the background ones.[46]

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Nute Gunray's Thai accent was chosen after Lucas and McCallum listened to various languages to decide how the Neimodians would speak.[47] The character design of Watto was an amalgam of rejected ideas; his expressions were based on video footage of Secombe's voice acting, photographs of animation supervisor Rob Coleman imitating the character, and modeler Steve Alpin saying Watto's lines to a mirror.[48] Lucas described Sebulba's design as 'a spider crossed with an orangutan crossed with a sloth',[49] with a camel-like face, and clothing inspired by medieval armor.[50]

Casting[edit]

After Samuel L. Jackson expressed interest in appearing in a Star Wars film, he was approached by casting director Robin Gurland to play Windu.[8]Ray Park, a martial arts champion with experience in gymnastics and sword fighting, was originally a member of the stunt crew.[8] Stunt coordinator Nick Gillard filmed Park to demonstrate his conception of the lightsaber battles. Lucas and McCallum were so impressed with the test tape that they gave Park the role of Maul. His voice was considered 'too squeaky' and was dubbed over in post-production by Peter Serafinowicz.[12]Keira Knightley's parents tried to convince her not to audition, but the teenage actress still sought a role since she was a Star Wars fan.[51] The casting was influenced by Knightley's remarkable similarity to Natalie Portman, with the actress admitting their mothers could not tell each other apart.[52] Knightley was reported to have 'cried every single day' due to finding the wardrobe uncomfortable.[51]

Silas Carson was cast as Nute Gunray because another actor was uncomfortable with the costumes used by the Trade Federation characters, which were hot, exerted a lot of pressure on the bearer, and took about 15 minutes to apply. Hugh Quarshie considered the part of Panaka as 'a good career move' and a production that would be fun to make.[53]Brian Blessed originally auditioned for the role of Sio Bibble, the Governor of Naboo,[54] for which he was considered 'too loud'.[55] Casting director Robin Gurland approached him to play Nass because it was a 'bigger than life' character with 'a kind of bravado'.[56] Blessed described Nass as a 'reluctant hero',[55] and a fun role to play.[57]Sofia Coppola, daughter of Lucas' long-time friend and creative partner Francis Ford Coppola, considers Lucas as 'like an uncle to me'. As she prepared the script for her directorial debut The Virgin Suicides, Sofia heard Lucas would make a new Star Wars film and asked him if she could accompany him during filming. Lucas offered Coppola a role in the royal entourage, which she accepted because it 'seemed like a good vantage point to watch without getting in the way'.[58]

Filming[edit]

Remains of Mos Espa in the Tunisian desert, near Nafta.

Filming began on June 26, 1997, and ended on September 30 of that year, primarily taking place at Leavesden Film Studios in England. Leavesden was leased for a two and a half year period so the production company could leave the sets intact and return after principal photography had been completed.[59] The forest scenes on Naboo were filmed at Cassiobury Park in Watford, Hertfordshire.[60][61]Pick-ups were shot between August 1998 and February 1999 after Lucas screened a rough cut of the film for friends and colleagues in May 1998.[62] Most of the action and stunts were filmed by Roger Christian's second unit, which worked alongside the main unit instead of afterwards because of the high number of shots to be completed daily.[43]

The Tunisian desert was again used for the Tatooine scenes;[63] Mos Espa was built outside the city of Tozeur. On the night following the third day of shooting in Tozeur, an unexpected sandstorm destroyed many of the sets and props. The production was quickly rescheduled to allow for repairs and was able to leave Tunisia on the date originally planned.[64] The Italian Caserta Palace was used as the interior of the Theed City Naboo Palace;[63] it was used as a location for four days after it had been closed to visitors. Scenes with explosions were filmed on replica sets in Leavesden.[65]

The Palace of Caserta, in Italy, was the location for the Naboo Royal Palace.

A binder with the film's storyboards served as a reference for live-action filming, shots that would be filmed in front of a chroma key blue screen, and shots that would be composed using CGI. The sets were often built with the parts that would be required on screen; often they were built only up to the heights of the actors. Chroma key was extensively used for digital set extensions, backgrounds or scenes that required cinematographer David Tattersall to seek powerful lamps to light the sets and visual effects supervisor John Knoll to develop software that would remove the blue reflection from shiny floors. Knoll, who remained on set through most of the production, worked closely with Tatterstall to ensure that the shots were suitable to add effects later. The cameras were fitted with data capture models to provide technical data for the CGI artists.[66]

The Phantom Menace was the final Star Wars film to be shot on 35mm film until Episode VII (Star Wars: The Force Awakens). Some scenes, mostly of elements filmed by the special effects team, were shot on high definition, digital video tapes to test the performance of digital recordings, which Lucas and McCallum considered the next logical step because of the amount of digitizing—an expensive process compared to recording directly on digital media—for the compositing of computer-generated effects. All future films would be shot using SonyCineAlta high-definition video cameras.[67][68]Greg Proops and Scott Capurro were filmed wearing makeup and blue bodysuits so their heads could be joined in a computer-generated body. The visual effects crew did not like the original results and crafted Fode and Beed as an entirely computer generated alien.[69]

Editing took two years; Paul Martin Smith started the process in England and focused on dialogue-heavy scenes. Ben Burtt—who was also the film's sound editor—was responsible for action sequences under Lucas' supervision. Non-linear editing systems played a large part in translating Lucas' vision; he constantly tweaked, revised and reworked shots and scenes. The final sound mix was added in March 1999 and the following month the film was completed after the delivery of the remaining visual effects shots.[70]

Effects[edit]

'Writing the script was much more enjoyable this time around because I wasn't constrained by anything. You can't write one of these movies without knowing how you're going to accomplish it. With CG at my disposal, I knew I could do whatever I wanted'.

—George Lucas[71]

The film saw breakthrough in computer generated effects. About 1,950 of the shots in The Phantom Menace have visual effects. The scene in which toxic gas is released on the Jedi is the only sequence with no digital alteration.[49] The work was so extensive that three visual effects supervisors divided the workload among themselves—John Knoll supervised the on-set production and the podrace and space battle sequences, Dennis Muren supervised the underwater sequence and the ground battle, and Scott Squires, alongside teams assigned for miniature effects and character animation, worked on the lightsaber effects.[72]

Until the film's production, many special effects in the film industry were achieved using miniature models, matte paintings, and on-set visual effects—although other films had made extensive use of CGI. Knoll previewed 3,500 storyboards for the film; Lucas accompanied him to explain factors of the shots that would be practical and those which would be created through visual effects. Knoll later said that on hearing the explanations of the storyboards, he did not know how to accomplish what he had seen. The result was a mixture of original techniques and the newest digital techniques to make it difficult for the viewer to guess which technique was being used. Knoll and his visual effects team wrote new computer software, including cloth simulators to allow a realistic depiction of the digital characters' clothing, to create certain shots. Another goal was to create computer-generated characters that could act seamlessly with live-action actors. While filming scenes with CGI characters, Lucas would block the characters using their corresponding voice actors on-set. The voice actors were then removed and the live-action actors would perform the same scene alone. A CGI character would later be added into the shot to complete the conversation.[73] Lucas also used CGI to correct the physical presence of actors in certain scenes.[49] Practical models were used when their visuals helped with miniature sceneries for backgrounds, set extensions, and model vehicles that would be scanned to create the digital models or filmed to represent spaceships and podraces.[74]

Lucas, who had previously confronted problems with the props used to depict R2-D2, allowed ILM and the production's British special effects department to create their own versions of the robot. Nine R2-D2 models were created; one was for actor Kenny Baker to be dropped into, seven were built by ILM and featured two wheelchair motors capable of moving 440 pounds (200 kg), enabling it to run and be mostly used in stage sets, and the British studio produced a pneumatic R2-D2 that could shift from two to three legs and was mostly used in Tunisia because its motor drive system allowed it to drive over sand.[75]

Lucas originally planned to create many of the aliens with computer graphics, but those that would be more cost-effectively realized with masks and animatronics were created by Nick Dudman's creature effects team. These included the Neimodians, background characters in Mos Espa, the Jedi Council, and the Galactic Senate. Dudman's team was told where the creatures would be required six months before principal photography begun, and they rushed the production. The Neimodian suits, which were originally intended as digital characters, were delivered one day before they would be required on set. Dudman traveled to Skywalker Ranch to see the original creatures that could be reused, and read the script for a breakdown of scenes with practical creatures, leaving only the more outlandish designs to be created using CGI.[76]

To research for the podrace vehicles, the visual effects crew visited a jet aircraft junkyard outside Phoenix, Arizona and scavenged four Boeing 747 engines.[49] Life-sized replicas of the engines were built and sent to Tunisia to provide reference in the film. Except for Jake Lloyd inside a hydraulically controlled cockpit and a few practical podracer models, the entire podracing scene—which the effects crew designed to be as 'out of this world' as possible—is computer-generated.[63][77]

Music[edit]

As with previous Star Wars films, Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace's score was composed and conducted by John Williams. He started composing the score in October 1998 and began recording the music with the London Voices and London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios on February 10, 1999. Williams decided to use electronic instruments such as synthesizers to enhance the sound and choral pieces to 'capture the magical, mystical force that a regular orchestra might not have been able to provide', and create an atmosphere that was 'more mysterious and mystical and less military' than those of the original trilogy.[78] One of the most notable tracks is 'Duel of the Fates', which uses the chorus to give a religious, temple-like feel to the epic lightsaber duel. The track was made into a music video.[79] While composing Anakin's theme, Williams tried to reflect the innocence of his childhood and to foreshadow his transformation into Darth Vader by using slight suggestions of 'The Imperial March' in the melody.[78]

The film's soundtrack was released by Sony Classical Records on May 4, 1999. This album featured the score, which Williams restructured as a listening experience; it is not presented in film order and omits many notable cues from the film because of the space restriction of the compact disc.[80] A two-disc 'Ultimate Edition' was released on November 14, 2000. The set features almost the entire score as it is heard in the film, including all of the edits and loops that were made for the sound mix.[81]

Themes[edit]

The face of Darth Maul drew upon depictions of the devil.

Like previous Star Wars films, The Phantom Menace makes several references to historical events and films that George Lucas watched in his youth. The Star Wars films typically mix several concepts from different mythologies together.[82]

The Jedi practice Zen-like meditation and martial arts, as did the ancient Japanese Samurai warriors. The name 'Qui-Gon' adapts the term qigong, which refers to a Chinese discipline involving meditation and cultivation of the flow of the vital energy called 'Chi' or 'Qi' for healing, health and combat. The words Ch'i (Chinese), gi (Korean), ki (Japanese) and the Indian term 'Prana' all refer to the energy that is thought to flow through all living things, from the source of all chi (or power) which is 'The Way' or 'The Tao' in Chinese philosophy. In Taoist philosophy, from The Way, yin and yang—the opposing but complementary aspects of reality or nature—are born. Unlike Chinese philosophy, in which yin and yang are not moral qualities, the ancient Persian philosophy of Zurvanism taught that the dualism of dark and light forces are locked in an eternal battle while being two sides (or evolutes) of the same 'Force', the force of time itself (Zurvan)—the prime mover. These elements derive primarily from Eastern and Iranian religions and myths.[82]

There are many references to Christian beliefs in the film, such as the appearance of Darth Maul, whose design draws heavily from traditional depictions of the Christian devil, complete with red skin and horns.[82] Maul's facial tattoos were inspired by the indigenous peoples of Brazil.[83] The Star Wars film cycle features a similar Christian narrative involving Anakin Skywalker; he is the 'chosen one'—the individual prophesied to bring balance to the Force—who was conceived of a virgin birth and is tempted to join the Sith. Anakin's fall from grace seemingly prevents him from fulfilling his destiny as the 'chosen one' (until the prophecy comes true in Return of the Jedi). The inspiration behind the story of the virgin birth parallels a concept developed by Joseph Campbell and his work on The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which heavily influenced Lucas' writing of the original Star Wars trilogy's outline.[82]

Japanese films such as Akira Kurosawa's The Hidden Fortress influenced the original Star Wars film; scholars say that The Phantom Menace was likewise influenced by Korean and Japanese culture. Film historians Geoff King and Tanya Krzywinska write, 'The costume and make-up designs .. favour a mixture of the gothic and the oriental [sic] over anything very futuristic. The gothic is most strongly apparent in Darth Maul's demonic horns and the red and black make-up mask that borrows from the facial designs found in depictions of Japanese demons'. King and Krzywinska say that 'Qui-Gon's pony tail and Obi-Wan's position of apprentice further encourage a reading in terms of the Samurai tradition'. They also say 'Amidala, in keeping with her status and character, has a number of highly formal outfits .. to go with hair sculpted into a curve that frames make-up of a Japanese cast'.[84]

The Phantom Menace Free Online

Release[edit]

The release on May 19, 1999 of the first new Star Wars film in 16 years was accompanied by a considerable amount of attention.[85] Few film studios released films during the same week: DreamWorks and Universal Studios released The Love Letter on May 21 and Notting Hill on May 28, respectively.[86]The Love Letter was a commercial failure but Notting Hill fared better and followed The Phantom Menace closely in second place.[87] Employment consultant firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas estimated that 2.2 million full-time employees missed work to attend the film, resulting in a US$293 million loss of productivity. According to The Wall Street Journal, so many workers announced plans to view the premiere that many companies closed on the opening day.[88] Queue areas formed outside cinema theaters over a month before ticket sales began.[89]

More theater lines appeared when it was announced that cinemas were not allowed to sell tickets in advance until two weeks into the release. This was because of a fear that family theater-goers would be either unable to receive tickets or would be forced to pay higher prices for them. Instead, tickets were to be sold on a first-come-first-served basis.[90] However, after meetings with the National Association of Theatre Owners, Lucasfilm agreed to allow advance ticket sales on May 12, 1999, provided there was a limit of 12 tickets per customer.[91] As a result, some advance tickets were sold by scalpers at prices as high as US$100 apiece, which a distribution chief called 'horrible' and said was exactly what they wanted to avoid.[92]Daily Variety reported that theater owners received strict instructions from Lucasfilm that the film could only play in the cinema's largest auditorium for the first 8–12 weeks, no honor passes were allowed for the first eight weeks, and they were obliged to send their payments to distributor 20th Century Fox within seven days.[93]

Despite worries about the film being finished on time, two weeks before its theatrical release Lucasfilm moved the release date from May 21 to 19, 1999. At the ShoWest Convention, Lucas said the change was intended to give the fans a 'head start' by allowing them to view it during the week and allowing families to view it during weekends. Foreshadowing his future conversion to digital cinematography, Lucas said the film would be released on four digital projectors on June 18, 1999.[94] Eleven charity premieres were staged across the United States on May 16, 1999; receipts from the Los Angeles event, where corporate packages were available for between US$5,000 and US$25,000; proceeds were donated to the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.[95] Other charity premieres included the Dallas premiere for the Children's Medical Center, the Aubrey Fund for Pediatric Cancer Research at the Sloan-Kettering Hospital in New York, the Big Brother/Sister Association of the Philadelphia premiere, and the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C. A statement said that tickets were sold at US$500 apiece and that certain sections of the theaters were set aside for disadvantaged children.[96]

Marketing[edit]

Lucasfilm spent US$20 million on the film's advertising campaign and made promotional licensing deals with Hasbro, Lego, Tricon Global Restaurants, and PepsiCo.[97] Lucasfilm also helped the Star Wars fan club to organize an event called Star Wars Celebration, which was held in Denver, Colorado between April 30 and May 2, 1999.[98]

Phantom

The teaser trailer was released on selected screens accompanying Meet Joe Black on November 13, 1998, and media reported that people were paying full admission at theaters to see the trailer.[99] To keep fans from leaving before the movie was over, some theaters played the teaser an additional time after the film finished.[100] A second trailer was released on March 12, 1999, with the film Wing Commander. Again, many fans paid full theater admission to watch the new trailer.[101] A bootlegged version of the preview was leaked to the Internet the same day.[102] The next morning, the trailer was released on the film's official website and shortly afterwards the servers became overloaded.[103] The theatrical trailer caused even more media attention because it was premiered in theaters and screened at the ShoWest Convention in Las Vegas,[104] and was aired on Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood.[102]

The teaser poster, featuring Anakin with his shadow forming Darth Vader's silhouette, was released on November 10, 1998. After Lucas opted for a drawn theatrical poster, Drew Struzan, the artist responsible for the Special Edition posters, was commissioned to illustrate, and the poster was unveiled on March 11, 1999. Lucasfilm dictated that, contractually, Struzan's illustration was the only art the foreign distributors could use, and other than the text, it could not be modified in any way.[105]

Many tie-in adaptations, such as a LucasArtsvideo game for the PlayStation and PC,[106] a pinball machine by Williams,[107] a four-part comic book adaptation by Dark Horse Comics,[108] and a junior novelization by Scholastic were released.[109] The film's official novelization was written by Terry Brooks, who met with Lucas before writing the book and receiving his approval and guidance. It included information about pending developments in the following two installments of the series.[110]

General Mills and Brisk were promotional partners in North America for the 2012 3D re-release but promotion was limited.[111][112] The film was extensively promoted in Japan; promotional products were sold by 7-Eleven, Domino's Pizza, Pepsi and Gari-Gari Kun.[113]Kellogg's promoted the film internationally,[114][115] and French restaurant Quick launched three Star Wars-themed burgers. Lucasfilm also partnered with Variety, the Children's Charity to raise funds for children through the sale of a special edition badge.[116]

Home media[edit]

Comparison between the puppet of Yoda, present in the theatrical and DVD releases, and the computer-generated model, present in the Blu-ray Disc and 3D releases.

The film was released worldwide on VHS between April 3 and 8, 2000. Two versions were released in North America on April 4—a standard pan and scan version and a widescreen Collector's Edition version. In its first two days of availability, the regular version sold 4.5 million copies and the limited edition sold 500,000.[117] It was the first Star Wars film to be officially released on DVD, on October 16, 2001, in a slightly extended cut from the theatrical release.[118] The special features included seven deleted scenes completed specifically for the DVD, a commentary track featuring Lucas and producer Rick McCallum, and several documentaries—including a full-length documentary entitled The Beginning: Making Episode I. The Phantom Menace became the fastest selling DVD ever in the U.S.; 2.2 million copies were sold in its first week after release.[119]

The DVD version was re-released in a prequel trilogy box set on November 4, 2008.[120] A Laserdisc version of The Phantom Menace was released in Japan several months before it was available on DVD in the U.S.[121] The Star Wars films were released by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment on Blu-ray Disc on September 16, 2011;[122]The Phantom Menace was restored to improve the picture quality and remove the magnification present on the previous DVD release, restoring approximately 8 percent of the picture to the frame.[123] In the Blu-ray release of The Phantom Menace, the Yoda puppet was replaced with a CGI model, making it consistent with the other films of the prequel trilogy.[124]

On April 7, 2015, Walt Disney Studios, 20th Century Fox, and Lucasfilm jointly announced the digital releases of the six released Star Wars films. Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment released The Phantom Menace through the iTunes Store, Amazon Video, Vudu, Google Play, and Disney Movies Anywhere on April 10, 2015.[125]

3D re-release[edit]

On September 28, 2010, it was announced that all six films in the series would be stereo-converted to 3D. These would be re-released in episode order, beginning with The Phantom Menace, which was released to cinemas in February 10, 2012.[126] Prime Focus Limited did the conversion under close supervision by ILM.[127] However, the 3D re-releases of Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones and Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith were postponed after Lucasfilm was bought by The Walt Disney Company, which decided to focus on the development of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.[128]

Lucas stated the 3D re-release was 'just a conversion' of the film's 2011 Blu-ray release and no additional changes were made.[129] Only a change to Anakin's magnetic wand during the podrace scene—its tip was sharpened to more accurately fit the original 2D photography to the new 3D image—was confirmed.[130]

Novelizations[edit]

Two novels based on the movie were published, a junior novel written by Patricia C. Wrede, and a novelization written by Terry Brooks, which includes some unique scenes.[131][132] A four-issue comic book adaptation was written by Henry Gilroy and published by Dark Horse Comics.[133]

Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

On review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 54% based on 222 reviews, with an average rating of 5.97/10. The site's critical consensus reads, 'Burdened by exposition and populated with stock characters, The Phantom Menace gets the Star Wars prequels off to a bumpy – albeit visually dazzling – start.'[134] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 51 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[135] On both sites, it is the lowest-rated film by critics in the Star Wars film series, excluding the animated The Clone Wars and the made-for-television Star Wars Holiday Special. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of 'A–' on an A+ to F scale.[136]

Many aspects of the scripting and characters were criticized, especially that of Jar Jar Binks, who was regarded by many members of the older fan community as toyetic—a merchandising opportunity rather than a serious character.[137][138] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times described Binks as 'a major miscue, a comic-relief character who's frankly not funny.'[139] Drew Grant of Salon.com wrote 'Perhaps the absolute creative freedom director George Lucas enjoyed while dreaming up the flick's 'comic' relief—with no studio execs and not many an independently minded actor involved—is a path to the dark side.'[140]

Conversely, Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it three-and-a-half stars out of four and called it 'an astonishing achievement in imaginative filmmaking' and said 'Lucas tells a good story.' Ebert also wrote that 'If some of the characters are less than compelling, perhaps that's inevitable' because it is the opening film in the new trilogy. He concluded his review by saying that rather than Star Trek films, filmmakers could '[g]ive me transparent underwater cities and vast hollow senatorial spheres any day.'[141] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a 'B' grade and complimented Liam Neeson's performance and the action scenes.[142] In an Entertainment Weekly review for the DVD release, Marc Bernardin gave the film a 'C–', calling it 'haplessly plotted, horribly written, and juvenile'.[143] ReelViews' James Berardinelli wrote:

Looking at the big picture, in spite of all its flaws, The Phantom Menace is still among the best 'bang for a buck' fun that can be had in a movie theater. It isn't as fresh as the original Star Wars nor does it have the thematic richness and narrative complexity of The Empire Strikes Back, but it is a distinct improvement over Return of the Jedi. In fact, after Return of the Jedi, I didn't have a burning desire to return to this galaxy 'far, far away', but, with The Phantom Menace, Lucas has revived my interest. Now, it's with genuine regret that I realize the next segment of the series is three long years away.[144]

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Andrew Johnston of Time Out New York wrote 'Let's face it: no film could ever match the expectations some have for Episode I – The Phantom Menace. Which isn't to say it's a disappointment: on the contrary, it's awesomely entertaining, provided you accept it on its own terms .. Like the original film, it's a Boy's Own adventure yarn with a corny but irresistible spiritual subtext. The effects and production design are stunning, but they always serve the story, not the other way around.'[145] Susan Wloszczyna of USA Today said the film did 'plenty right' and praised the characters Darth Maul and Watto.[146] David Cornelius of efilmcritic.com said the film's better moments 'don't merely balance out the weaker ones—they topple them.'[147] Colin Kennedy of Empire magazine said that despite problems with pacing and writing, 'there is still much pleasure to be had watching our full-blown Jedi guides in action.' He praised the visuals and Liam Neeson's performance, and said the duel between Darth Maul and the Jedi was 'the saga's very best lightsaber battle'.[148]

Empire magazine ranked The Phantom Menace on its list of '500 Greatest Movies of All Time',[149] while Entertainment Weekly and Comcast included the film on their lists of the worst movie sequels.[150][151] James Berardinelli wrote 'The Phantom Menace was probably the most overhyped motion picture of the last decade (if not longer), and its reputation suffered as a result of its inability to satisfy unreasonable expectations.'[152] William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer agreed that the film's massive hype caused many of the negative reactions, saying 'it built expectations that can't possibly be matched and scuttled [the] element of storytelling surprise.' He also said the film was 'well made and entertaining' and was much better than similar box office fare released around that year, such as The Mummy and The Matrix.[153]

The introduction of midi-chlorians—microscopic organisms that mediate use of the Force—in the film has been controversial among fans. Some viewed it as a concept that negates the Force's spiritual quality, although the film still portrays the Force as a mysterious entity using the midi-chlorians to communicate with living beings. Film historian Daniel Dinello says 'Anathema to Star Wars fanatics who thought they reduced the Force to a kind of viral infection, midi-chlorians provide a biological interface, the link between physical bodies and spiritual energy.'[154] Religion expert John D. Caputo writes 'In the 'Gospel according to Lucas', a world is conjured up in which the intractable oppositions that have tormented religious thinkers for centuries are reconciled .. The gifts that the Jedi masters enjoy have a perfectly plausible scientific basis, even if its ways are mysterious: their bodily cells have a heavier than usual concentration of 'midi-chlorians'.'[155]

Watch The Phantom Menace

After the film's release, there was controversy over whether several alien characters reflect racial stereotypes. For example, the oafish, slow-witted Jar Jar Binks had long droopy ears reminiscent of dreadlocks and spoke with what many perceived as a Caribbean patois reminiscent of Jamaican Creole.[156] The greedy and corrupt Neimoidians of the Trade Federation spoke with East Asian accents and the unprincipled trader Watto has been interpreted as a Jewish stereotype reminiscent of Charles Dickens' character Fagin. Lucas has denied all of these implications,[137] instead criticizing the American media for using opinions from the Internet as a reliable source for news stories. Lucas added that it reflected more the racism of the commenters than it does the movie;[157] however, animator Rob Coleman said he viewed footage of Alec Guinness as Fagin in Oliver Twist to inspire his animators in the creation of Watto.[158] Drew Grant described Jar Jar Binks as '[s]ervile and cowardly .. a black minstrel-ish stereotype on par with Stepin Fetchit.'[140]Michael Eric Dyson, professor of African-American studies at Georgetown University, said the entire Gungan people seem oddly suggestive of a primitive African tribe. Dyson said 'The leader of Jar Jar's tribe is a fat, bumbling buffoon with a rumbling voice, and he seems to be a caricature of a stereotypical African tribal chieftain.'[159]

Box office[edit]

Despite its mixed critical reception, The Phantom Menace was a financial success, breaking many box office records in its debut. It broke The Lost World: Jurassic Park's records for the largest single-day gross for taking more than $28 million in the opening day and fastest to gross $100 million in five days. It grossed $64.8 million in its opening weekend, the second-ever highest at the time.[160] It also became the quickest film to reach the $200 million and $300 million marks, surpassing Independence Day (1996) and Titanic (1997) respectively.[161]The Phantom Menace was 1999's most successful film, staying in the Top 10 until August 5 (11 weeks total), earning $431.1 million in North America and $493.2 million in other territories, taking $924.3 million worldwide.[161]Box Office Mojo estimates that the film sold over 84.8 million tickets in the US in its initial theatrical run.[162] At that time, the film was the third highest-grossing film in North America behind Titanic and Star Wars (1977), and the second highest-grossing film worldwide behind Titanic without adjusting for inflation of ticket prices. When adjusted for ticket price inflation, it ranked as the 19th-highest-grossing film domestically, making it the fourth Star Wars film to be in the Inflation-Adjusted Top 20. Outside North America, the film grossed over $10 million in Australia ($25.9 million), Brazil ($10.4 million), France and Algeria ($43 million), Germany ($53.9 million), Italy ($12.9 million), Japan ($109.9 million), Mexico ($12 million), Spain ($25 million), and the United Kingdom and Ireland ($81.9 million).[163]

After its 3D re-release in 2012, the worldwide box office gross exceeded $1 billion.[164] Although in the intervening years, the film had lost some of its rankings in the lists of highest-grossing films, the 3D re-release returned it to the worldwide all-time Top 10 for several months.[165] In North America, its revenues overtook those of the original Star Wars as the saga's highest-grossing film when not adjusting for inflation of ticket prices, and is the tenth highest-grossing film in North America as of August 2017.[166] In North America, its ranking on the Adjusted for Ticket Price Inflation list climbed to 16th place—one place behind Return of the Jedi.[167] The 3D re-release, which premiered in February 2012, earned $43 million—$22.5 million of which was in North America—worldwide.[168] The 3D re-release earned US$102,727,119 worldwide—including $43.5 million in North America—and has increased the film's overall box office takings to $474.5 million domestically, and $552.5 million in other territories.[169] The film's earnings exceeded $1 billion worldwide on February 22, 2012, making it the first Star Wars film and the 11th film in history—excluding inflation—to do so.[164][169]

Accolades[edit]

The Phantom Menace was nominated for three Academy Awards: Best Sound Effects Editing, Best Visual Effects, and Best Sound (Gary Rydstrom, Tom Johnson, Shawn Murphy and John Midgley); all of which went to The Matrix.[170][171] The film won Saturn Awards for Best Costumes and Best Special Effects,[172] the MTV Movie Award for Best Action Scene,[173] and a Young Artist Award for Jake Lloyd's performance.[174] It was also nominated for—among others—the BAFTAs for Visual Effects and Sound,[175] and the Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media.[176] The film did however receive seven Golden Raspberry Award (Razzie) nominations for Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay, Worst Supporting Actor (Jake Lloyd as Anakin), Worst Supporting Actress (Sofia Coppola as Saché), Worst Screen Couple (Jake Lloyd and Natalie Portman), and Jar Jar Binks actor Ahmed Best won the Worst Supporting Actor category.[177]

Sequels[edit]

A sequel, Attack of the Clones, was released in 2002.[178] A second sequel, Revenge of the Sith, was released in 2005.[179] The story continues a decade later with Anakin Skywalker now grown to adulthood with the character now played by Hayden Christensen.[180][181]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Footnotes

  1. ^The DVD released in 2001 extends the film by about three minutes.

Citations

  1. ^'Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace'. British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
  2. ^ ab'Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 14, 2007.
  3. ^Henderson, Stuart (2014). The Hollywood Sequel: History & Form, 1911-2010. British Film Institute. p. 156. ISBN9781844578436.
  4. ^ abcdef'Star Wars Episode I Production Notes: The Actors and Characters – Part I'. StarWars.com. May 1, 1999. Archived from the original on October 23, 2004. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  5. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, p. 44-45.
  6. ^Bowen 2005, p. 3
  7. ^'Return of the galaxy's new beauty'. CNN. 2002. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  8. ^ abcdef'Star Wars Episode I Production Notes: The Actors and Characters – Part II'. StarWars.com. May 1, 1999. Archived from the original on October 23, 2004. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  9. ^'Homing Beacon #134: Palpatine Speaks'. StarWars.com. April 14, 2005. Archived from the original on April 18, 2005. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  10. ^'The Man (Literally) Behind C-3PO'. StarWars.com. November 2, 1999. Archived from the original on November 2, 2007. Retrieved April 24, 2009.
  11. ^Williams, Andrew (May 19, 2005). 'Kenny Baker'. Metro. Retrieved January 28, 2009.
  12. ^ abcdDaly, Steven (May 19, 1999). 'Behind the scenes of The Phantom Menace'. Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on June 19, 2007. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
  13. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, p. 96.
  14. ^Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace audio commentary. The Phantom Menace DVD: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. 2001.
  15. ^Ross, Dalton (February 3, 2012). 'George Lucas talks about adding a digital Yoda to 'The Phantom Menace' – exclusive video'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 20, 2013.
  16. ^Chernoff, Scott (December 1997 – January 1998). 'Terence Stamp: Stamp of Approval'. Star Wars Insider (41).
  17. ^'Multiple Personality'. Star Wars Insider (83). July 2005.
  18. ^Simpson, Christian (June 4, 2014). 'From Fandom to Phantom: When Star Wars Dreams Become Reality'. Star Wars.com. Retrieved July 15, 2016.
  19. ^George Lucas intro to Splinter of the Mind's Eye 1994 reissue
  20. ^Rinzler 2007, p. 107
  21. ^Kaminski 2007, p. 134
  22. ^Kaminski 2007, pp. 164–165
  23. ^Bouzereau 1997, p. 123
  24. ^Clarke, Gerald; Worrell, Denise (May 23, 1983). 'I've Got to Get My life Back Again'. Time. Retrieved April 23, 2009.
  25. ^Kaminski 2007, p. 227
  26. ^Kaminski 2007, pp. 294–295
  27. ^Kaminski 2008, p. 318
  28. ^Kaminski 2007, pp. 299–300
  29. ^ ab'Special Featurette', All I Need Is An Idea (2001), DVD
  30. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, p. 7.
  31. ^Bowen 2005, p. 93
  32. ^ abShay, Don (July 1999). 'Return of the Jedi'. Cinefex (78): 15–32.
  33. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 8–9.
  34. ^'Star Wars Episode 1 Was Offered to Ron Howard'. Collider. November 25, 2015.
  35. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 10–12.
  36. ^Christopher, James (April 12, 2000). 'Greetings, Earthlings; Arts'. The Times. p. 16.
  37. ^Vaz, Mark Cotta (2002). The Art of Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (1st ed.). New York: Ballantine Publ. Group. p. 2. ISBN9780345431257.
  38. ^Thousands of Things DVD Special Featurette, [2001]
  39. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 12–17.
  40. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 54–55.
  41. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 16–22.
  42. ^ abPrime of the Jedi DVD Special Featurette, [2001]
  43. ^ abBouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 102–3
  44. ^Costumes DVD Special Featurette, [2001]
  45. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, p. 23.
  46. ^Bouzereau & Duncan 1999, pp. 60–64.
  47. ^'Silas Carson: Hero with a Thousand Faces'. StarWars.com. May 30, 2002. Archived from the original on February 2, 2008. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
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Sources[edit]

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  • Bouzereau, Laurent (1997). The Annotated Screenplays. Del Rey. ISBN0-345-40981-7.
  • Bouzereau, Laurent; Duncan, Jody (1999). The Making of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace. Ballantine. ISBN0-345-43111-1.
  • Bowen, Jonathan L. (2005). 'Anticipation: The Real Life Story of Star Wars: Episode I-The Phantom Menace'. iUniverse. ISBN0-595-34732-0.
  • Kaminski, Michael (2007). 'The Secret History of Star Wars'. Archived from the original on July 6, 2007.
  • ——— (2008) [2007]. The Secret History of Star Wars. Legacy Books Press. ISBN978-0-9784652-3-0.
  • Rinzler, J.W. (2007). The Making of Star Wars: The Definitive Story Behind the Original Film (Star Wars). Del Rey. ISBN0-345-49476-8.

Further reading[edit]

  • 2000: Michael J. Hanson & Max S. Kay: Star Wars: The New Myth, Xlibris, ISBN978-1401039899
  • 2008: Michael Kaminski: The Secret History of Star Wars, Legacy Books Press, ISBN978-0978465230
  • 2013: Paul F. McDonald: The Star Wars Heresies: Interpreting The Themes, Symbols and Philosophies of Episodes I-III, Mcfarland, ISBN978-0786471812
  • 2015: Matthew Bortolin: The Dharma Of Star Wars, Wisdom Publications, ISBN978-1614292869

External links[edit]

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