News from The Open University
Posted on • Arts, Arts and social sciences
Creators of props and costumes from the Star Wars film franchise are being invited to help the film industry go greener.
It’s those props from the iconic films such as Stormtrooper uniforms to other equally ubiquitous items that are the key focus of a new sustainability study, led by an Open University academic.
Dr Rebecca Harrison
Dr Rebecca Harrison, who is a film critic and Lecturer in Film and Media at the OU, has just begun the research that could show filmmakers how to source and provide greener props and costumes in the future.
Dr Harrison has put out a call for prop and costume makers who have worked on Star Wars films or TV shows to contribute interviews about their work.
The interviews will form part of her study Environmental Impact of Filming (EIF), which will look at the lifecycle of four Star Wars props from the extraction of raw materials all the way through to their disposal or repurposing.
The research begins hot on the heels of the release of Andor, the new 12-episode Disney+ Star Wars TV series, which hit the small screens in late September.
Rebecca’s 20-month study is supported by sustainability experts at BAFTA Albert, the home of environmental sustainability in the film and TV industry, and the National Science and Media Museum.
As a result of the research, Rebecca aims to provide a tool kit of resources that will help the UK’s film industries to improve their sustainability practices.
She wants EIF to support the UK’s film industries in their ongoing work to improve sustainability practices and will show how the filmmakers of today might learn about sustainability from the prop and costume practices of the past.
Rebecca said:
“The research will help us design workshops and online resources that encourage filmmakers to go greener, with advice about things like recycling props, choosing eco-friendly fabrics, and cutting carbon emissions.
“Meanwhile, the interviews we hold with Star Wars prop and costume makers will form an important archive that will enable future generations to learn about our filmmaking heritage and the industry’s developing interest in sustainability.
“The wide range of materials and processes used by UK-based creative talent to make Star Wars props and costumes are brilliant for thinking about good practice – and areas for improvement – from the 1970s to the present day.
“It’s exciting to think about what’s changed for the better over the past five decades, while also asking if there are sustainable practices from the past that we might want to revive.”
Rebecca, a self-confessed Star Wars fan, says her feet will remain firmly on the ground:
“It’s good to keep some critical distance from it. However, it’s so big and the storylines are so complicated that you do need an understanding of the films.”
Rebecca has also written a book on her study of the 1980 Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/empire-strikes-back-9781911239970/
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