IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.
- Awards
- 3 nominations
Colm Meaney
- Narrator
- (voice)
Manuel Martínez Velasco
- Self
- (as Manuel Velasco)
Bob Prowse
- Self
- (as Robert Prowse)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
David Prowse: I didn't know that I was Luke Skywalker's father until I went to the cinema and saw it in the movie.
- Crazy creditsThe views and opinions expressed in this documentary film are solely those of the commentators in it and do not reflect necessarily the view of the producers, actors or people involved in the production, nor imply endorsement or any affiliation with LucasFilm Ltd or George Lucas himself.
- ConnectionsEdited from Frankenstein (1910)
Featured review
Nice Enough Documentary, But Teases What It Doesn't Deliver
This documentary is a nice enough retrospective on the history and legacy of veteran British Hammer Horror film actor David Prowse, the actor who filled the dark shape of Darth Vader in the original trilogy of Star Wars films.
However, the documentary teases throughout a particularly fanboy mind-blowing scene in which the director of the documentary allows Prowse to reprise the penultimate scene in Return of the Jedi in which Darth Vader, who lay dying, removes his mask and reveals his face to his son Luke for the first time.
In the original film, Sebastian Shaw played the face of the man behind the mask, much to the chagrin of Prowse. The director of this documentary teases that he has reshot this scene with Prowse restored to the role of the dying Vader, and very nearly shows part of it, but cuts away before fans are treated to what they have dreamed of seeing since 1983.
Given that Disney allows fan films to be made in the Star Wars universe, and that Lucasfilm has had a long history of doing so, showing this to the world would cost the director nothing. Granted, Lucasfilm did not give permission, but Lucasfilm doesn't give tacit permission to anyone who asked to do something specific with the Star Wars universe if there is a profit involved. For a not-for-profit cause, such as just showing the clip to all of us fanboys really want to see the scene, it would cost them nothing. All it does is tease your interest all the way through the credits, hoping you will see it in this documentary.
Spoiler warning: you don't.
However, the documentary teases throughout a particularly fanboy mind-blowing scene in which the director of the documentary allows Prowse to reprise the penultimate scene in Return of the Jedi in which Darth Vader, who lay dying, removes his mask and reveals his face to his son Luke for the first time.
In the original film, Sebastian Shaw played the face of the man behind the mask, much to the chagrin of Prowse. The director of this documentary teases that he has reshot this scene with Prowse restored to the role of the dying Vader, and very nearly shows part of it, but cuts away before fans are treated to what they have dreamed of seeing since 1983.
Given that Disney allows fan films to be made in the Star Wars universe, and that Lucasfilm has had a long history of doing so, showing this to the world would cost the director nothing. Granted, Lucasfilm did not give permission, but Lucasfilm doesn't give tacit permission to anyone who asked to do something specific with the Star Wars universe if there is a profit involved. For a not-for-profit cause, such as just showing the clip to all of us fanboys really want to see the scene, it would cost them nothing. All it does is tease your interest all the way through the credits, hoping you will see it in this documentary.
Spoiler warning: you don't.
helpful•63
- braininajar1
- Nov 13, 2016
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €250,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $4,338
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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