Very similar to the paranormal religions unfold by its Bene Gesserit, the influences of Dune unfold to each nook of the universe of science fiction. In some tales, the inspirations are woven so tightly into the material of the story they’re practically unimaginable to choose up, perhaps even for the writer themself. In others, the homages to Dune are unmissable, sometimes to the purpose of being distracting. After which there’s Star Wars, probably the most blatant ripoff of all — at the very least, in response to Frank Herbert.
The Dune writer didn’t speak a lot about George Lucas’ landmark science fiction movie earlier than his dying in 1986, however he answered a couple of questions on it over time, and he all the time appeared at the very least a bit irritated on the similarities between the 2 tales.
The primary public feedback he appears to have made in regards to the film come from an interview with the Related Press from 1977, the 12 months A New Hope was launched. The article is fairly simple shit-stirring, however it’s clear that whereas Herbert hadn’t but seen the film, he did have some ideas about its similarities to his seminal sequence, which was already three books in.
Herbert begins by saying an editor for the Village Voice had known as him and requested if he had seen Star Wars, and whether or not or not he was going to sue. It’s a powerful lead-in, however apparently that’s what was prime of thoughts of Herbert.
“I’ll attempt onerous to not sue,” Herbert informed the Related Press. “I don’t know what e-book of mine it suits, however I think it might be Dune since in that I had a Princess Alia and the film has a Princess Leia. And I hear there’s a sandworm carcass and hood dwellers within the desert, identical to in Dune.”
Herbert goes on to brag, rightfully, in regards to the ubiquity of Dune, each in common tradition and at the same time as a school textbook on topics like “structure, psychology, writing, English, human residing, area evaluation, and a few I’ve forgotten.” Herbert doesn’t get too particular on this early article, however it’s clear the film’s reported similarities to his personal work didn’t sit fairly proper with him. And later it will be even clearer that they caught in his craw, a method or one other.
Now, with many years of hindsight and years of interviews, it’s simple to see that Star Wars, notably the primary movie, is an amalgamation of many genres and tales, together with (however not restricted to) science fiction, legendary fantasy, and the samurai films of Akira Kurosawa. There’s additionally a whole expanded universe of historical past within the Star Wars galaxy that borrows from everywhere in the sci-fi canon, and has helped encourage simply as many future writers.
However in the event you think about the time when Star Wars was only one tremendously profitable summer season blockbuster, it’s simple to know why Herbert might need had a bone to choose. And because the years glided by, it’s clear that he thought fairly a bit in regards to the topic, sufficient to depend the similarities between the titles.
“Lucas has by no means admitted that they copied a whole lot of Dune, and I’m not saying they did,” Herbert stated in 1985, throughout a talking engagement at UCLA. “I’m simply saying there are 16 factors of identification between the e-book Dune and Star Wars. Now you’ve had stat — what’s it? It’s 16 occasions 16 occasions 16 occasions… over 1, the percentages towards that being coincidence? There aren’t that many stars within the universe.”
Herbert’s pissed off quote stemmed from a query about whether or not or not Lucas ever purchased Herbert dinner — a reference to a long-standing joke of Herbert’s that even when Lucas didn’t blatantly steal his concepts to make Star Wars, he at the very least owes Herbert dinner for the coincidence.
However Frank Herbert was one to lose out on a battle of pettiness. A 12 months earlier than that UCLA interview, he revealed Heretics of Dune, the fifth e-book within the sequence and the second to final written by him. Late within the e-book, which is generally about the way forward for humanity after the dying of The God Emperor, Herbert has a small, inconspicuous passage that definitely seems like a reference to Star Wars. He doesn’t appear to have ever stated that formally, so we’ll allow you to choose:
Within the time of the Outdated Empire and even underneath the reign of Maud’Dib, the area across the Gammu Preserve had been a forest reserve, excessive floor rising properly above the oily residue that tended to cowl Harkonnen land. On this floor, the Harkonnens had grown a number of the most interesting pilingitam, a wooden of regular forex, all the time valued by the supremely wealthy. From probably the most historical occasions, the educated had most popular to encompass themselves with fantastic woods fairly than with the mass-produced synthetic supplies recognized then as polestine, polaz, and pormabat (latterly: tine, laz, and bat). Way back to the Outdated Empire there had been a pejorative label for the small wealthy and Households Minor arising from the information of the uncommon wooden’s worth.
“He’s a 3 P-O,” they stated, which means that such an individual surrounded himself with low cost copies constructed from déclassé substances.