Star Wars: A New Hope Poster Reimagined As Truly Classical Art
A fan reimagines a poster for Star Wars: A New Hope as truly classical art. Released in 1977 and retroactively titled Episode IV - A New Hope in 1981, the original Star Wars movie kickstarted the famous franchise set in a galaxy far, far away. It was a huge box office hit and is now widely regarded as one of the most influential films of all-time. It introduced several iconic Star Wars characters portrayed by then-unknown actors, including Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, and Carrie Fisher.
Written and directed by George Lucas, A New Hope was produced on a relatively meager production budget of $11 million for its time and due to its turbulent production process and lack of star power, virtually no one involved expected the film to become a hit. Newcomer Mark Hamill played the role of the reluctant hero, Luke Skywalker, while a pre-Indiana Jones Harrison Ford was selected to play the cynical smuggler Han Solo. An equally unknown Carrie Fisher played the Rebellion leader Princess Leia.
Now, a fan has reimagined A New Hope's iconic poster as classical art. Shared by Instagram artist @scadarts, who frequently combines old paintings with modern pop culture, the piece mashes up A New Hope's theatrical poster with a 1751 painting by Giovanni Paolo Panini, "A Concert Given by the duc de Nivernais to mark the Birth of the Dauphin." Seen below, the result is a crowd attending the opera looking onto a stage backdropped by the Star Wars poster featuring Luke, Leia, C-3p0, R2-D2, and course, Darth Vader and the Death Star. Check out the piece below:
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The mashup uses A New Hope's illustrated theatrical release poster, which was designed and painted by Tom Jung. Like the film itself, the poster is an iconic entity that has lived on and inspired many more like it. In 1977, Jung didn't know much about the actual movie when creating the poster. He was given the theme of good versus evil to work with and took inspiration from Frank Frazetta's work for Conan, which explains some of the poster's inconsistencies with the movie. Luke's muscular torso and Leia's suggestive pose don't really resemble anything seen in A New Hope.
Nevertheless, the poster went on to become truly iconic and happens to blend very nicely with Renaissance-era artwork. Due to the upcoming 45th anniversary of A New Hope, many are looking back to the original Star Wars movie in awe of what it was able to accomplish. Star Wars: A New Hope changed the game in terms of merchandising and marketing, and its posters played a huge role in that.
Source: @scadarts/Instagram
