Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Making of Star Wars #1

STAR WARS EPISODE ONE: THE MAKING OF THE PHANTOM MENACE

Rate this book
Covering every aspect of the first film in the new Star Wars trilogy - from the early storyboards to filming in secret locations. This book chronicles some important moments in film history, as the newest technology is pushed to its limits to realize Lucas' dream. 192 pp; illustrated.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

4 people are currently reading
358 people want to read

About the author

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
180 (40%)
4 stars
140 (31%)
3 stars
100 (22%)
2 stars
22 (4%)
1 star
7 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Jeff Lanter.
717 reviews11 followers
July 6, 2013
It is definitely interesting to read this book in 2013 knowing how Phantom Menace would be received. The tone of this book reflects the excitement fans felt before the movies which is no longer around. Being a huge Star Wars fan, I found the tone somewhat nostalgic and the book helped me appreciate Phantom Menace a little more. This book explains what inspired George Lucas to make another trilogy, how the designs of characters were created (more on this in a bit), casting, and the production and filming of the movie. It is fairly comprehensive. I was happy to learn more about some of the most visually interesting parts of the movie like the final battle, the podrace sequence, and the underwater segment on Naboo. All of these things helped me appreciate how at least technologically and from a film-making perspective, Phantom Menace was groundbreaking.

There are a few parts I don't love about the book. There is a two or three page summary of the entire plot of the movie. This seems unnecessary and maybe we're just a more spoiler-aware culture now, but it also seemed curious to include. Also, the design and concept art takes almost all the information from the "Art of Episode I" book so it essentially repeats a lot of information and images. Since I had just read that book, it made that section significantly less interesting than it should have been.

If you're a Star Wars fan or curious to see how they made Episode I, this book is worth tracking down for a light, but mostly entertaining read.
Profile Image for Eduardo.
548 reviews17 followers
July 28, 2023
This one feels *strange* to me. It’s listed as being part of the same “series” as the “Making of Star Wars” book that I read recently, about the process of making the original “Star Wars” film (despite having a different author). Based on that, I was expecting something of similar length and detail. This is… not that. I managed to read it in a single day. In fact, this book was published in 1999, meaning that this is less of a nuanced, detailed documentary look at the making of the movie by a film scholar as much as a promotional, behind-the-scenes look at “The Phantom Menace.”

That’s not a bad thing, but it’s not as good of a thing. It doesn’t have any reference to the resulting backlash, for starters–yeah, *I* loved this movie when it came out because I was in first grade. But this movie got a HUGE angry response from large portions of the fandom when it released, because of how different it was. There are a couple of sentences in this book that make it seem like everyone involved thought it would be universally loved, and it wasn’t.

[George Lucas isn’t one of those–he seemed to realize that a lot of people might hate it, but thought it was still the story that needed to be told as it was. Food for thought.]

So yes, there are some details about how the movie came together, and some great concept art and discussion about how characters were designed. There’s fun facts about the casting process. And there’s a ton about how the movie was filmed and the special effects were added in. But I was really hoping for a long, detailed look that would chronicle all the steps and cover the film’s reception at the time, as well as the legacy years later. And this isn’t that book.

Ah, well.
Profile Image for Mark.
Author 67 books173 followers
December 7, 2023
Twenty-two years after Star Wars was released, George Lucas presented The Phantom Menace to a world eager for new adventures in their favourite universe. The results, I think it’s fair to say, were mixed and although it didn’t really work for me at the time, looking at it now (a staggering 24 years later!), it’s easily the best of the prequels (how can it be 24 years?). Bouzereau and Duncan are capable, readable writers whose work I’ve thoroughly enjoyed in the past, but this at times feels a little bland. There’s plenty of information, certainly - from writing the script to designing the film, from casting to filming and the special effects - but it feels like it’s skating over the surface rather than giving us anything meaty. There’s some good interviews with Lucas, Rick McCallum (producer) and the key cast and it’s great to see ILM alumni from the first film involved and, yes, there’s a nice nostalgic air to reading it. For all my apparent gripes, I did enjoy it and the photographs scattered extensively throughout the text are very well chosen and reproduced. Worth a read for behind the scenes nerds like me and Star Wars fans in general.
Profile Image for Dimitris Papastergiou.
2,524 reviews86 followers
July 12, 2023
Great info and photographs and interviews and material, but what really stands out here is the artwork and the sketches done for the film, which I'd much rather see more of that.

Book is worthy of coffee table material.
Profile Image for Steven "Steve".
Author 4 books6 followers
February 13, 2024
A look at the making of Episode I. Includes a lot of interesting concept art and photography, along with quotes from many of the people involved in the film. I decided to read this in time for the 25th anniversary of the film.
Profile Image for Jeffrey Williams.
375 reviews6 followers
January 14, 2016
Laurent Bouzereau and Jody Duncan wrote an easy-to-read book that covers the making of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, complete with behind-the-scenes photographs. The authors keep the focus tight on the progression of how the film was made from the time that George Lucas began writing the script through the finished product including the film score and final edits. What they have succeeded in doing is movie magic through literature, as the topics they cover, storyboarding, set design, modeling, casting, filming, pre-production, post-production, editing, CGI creation, and film scoring, are all covered. This is advantageous for budding filmmakers who have never been a part of a crew working on a well-known blockbuster film to understand just how complicated the process is, and how many moving parts there are. What would have improved this book is a series of organizational charts as a companion, as certain crew members had multiple parts and it was difficult to keep them straight. Additionally, it appears that Bouzereau and Duncan each wrote different parts (as there are two chapters to the book, I'm assuming that each wrote one chapter), but there is a certain level of redundancy in each part. Perhaps it could have been edited a little more tightly in order to have a continuity of voice. Thankfully, the redundancies were limited in scope which did not detract from the read.
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,539 reviews
February 29, 2012
This as the book title says is the making of... It contains a lot less of the concept art than you would see from purely an artwork book and in some chapters very little photography at all. But what it does chart is the story of the making of the film but also the story of the return to the star wars universe which upon the completion of the special editions had been pretty much left alone. This book charts the return to the star wars universe and its re-awakening to the next incarnation - which led to the next 3 films, tv series and countless spin off merchandising.
This book rather than giving a rare glimpse in to the film makers work on how things are done (since as the ILM books) or cataloguing the creative ideas that never saw the film cut (as in the artwork books) - this gives you something more - it gives you a perspective we as the general public would never see- how a film is conceived, created and then released in to the world
25 reviews
May 19, 2015
The writers were very thorough with charting the technical aspects of the production, but seemed to have neglected the human interest stories. The book is filled with interviews with cast and crew, but hardly any detail from the writers' own observations or anecdotes from the set (you get the sense they never went down at all, just pieced together fact sheets with interviews). Additionally, many of the more interesting parts do not receive much in-depth coverage, like the lightsaber choreography, which was lightly touched upon, and the reader has to (and can) glean more information from other sources.
Compared to latter Making Of books (like ROTS), it feels very sterile - like an extended newspaper article than an insightful or engaging book.
Profile Image for Graham Tomlinson.
77 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2013
A good book for those interested in how these big budget films are made. Without going into great detail it gives you an insight into how the people involved invest up to 4 years of their lives in making it arrive on the big screen. Whilst some may argue it was a disappointment ( NOT including myself ) it was not the failing of those involved in its making. I have owned this book for almost 14 years and can finally say I have read it and enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Bryan Young.
Author 119 books157 followers
February 5, 2017
I really wish there was more new info in here, or that it was as substantive as the Making Of books that Rinzler wrote.
Profile Image for (Jen) The Artist Librarian.
356 reviews39 followers
June 10, 2011
I didn't enjoy this one as much as some of the later "behind the scenes" or "making of" or "the art of" Star Wars Prequel books (e.g. "Attack of the Clones"), but still, something to at least borrow from the library if you want a peak into the making of "The Phantom Menace" movie.
Profile Image for Matthew Siemers.
162 reviews3 followers
November 19, 2015
Awesome read. I'm a huge Star Wars fan and I learned a lot from this book. It was fascinating to learn how they went about producing this film. It also gave a lot of insight into the creative process. This film is a lot deeper than most people think. Highly recommended to Star Wars or film fans.
35 reviews3 followers
Read
April 5, 2008
I'm sort of sad that we have this...
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.