Currently, I have no time to write 400,000 word manifestos about SW canon policy, and Lucas' stance on it. But for those of you battling Rabid Stupid Assholes who like to twist quotes into pretzels then follow them with dozens of paragraphs "explaining" what that quote meant, Here's a few more relavent quotes that stand by themselves:
Clone Wars Q & A with Genndy Tartakovsky February 20, 2004
http://www.starwars.com/clonewars/about ... index.html
What about George Lucas' reaction?
It's been really great. I heard that he said that it is Star Wars, which is what we set out to do: to create really cool action cartoons that fit into the Star Wars story. He's been really happy about it, especially because his kids like it too, which is important."
Leland Chee on "parallel universes"
http://forums.starwars.com/thread.jspa? ... &start=240
From K-Mac@sff.net Mon Jul 19 00:22:41 1999"Parallel universe" suggests that each universe can go in separate directions which really isn't the case with regard to the EU. The EU is bound by what is seen in the most current version of the films and by directives from George Lucas.
From: "Michael P. Kube-McDowell" <K-Mac@sff.net>
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.starwars.misc
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 1999 16:17:31 GMT
Subject: Re: Star Wars books
On Sun, 18 Jul 1999 13:53:57 +0200, frank@marbot.gu.se (e l w e
n) wrote:
>
>I don't think Lucas himself has given any input to any of the novels.
>Rather, LucasFilm has a set of guidelines which every 'EU' author has to
>follow. Stuff like not killing off any of the main characters, and things
>like that.
I don't know what the current procedure is at Del Rey, but George
Lucas personally reviewed and signed off on outlines for the Bantam
novels. This was the third stage in the approval process--Bantam had
to give its okay, then Lucasfilm Licensing's continuity staff, then
Lucas himself.
K-Mac
TUCWS: Was George Lucas involved at any stage of Labyrinth? Was there anything that you wanted to include but was shot down?
http://forums.starwars.com/thread.jspa? ... start=9255JL: George was involved to the extent that he provided answers to the many questions I had about Master Sifo-Dyas, General Grievous, Dooku’s allegiance to Sidious, the Prophecy of the Chosen One, the Battle of Coruscant, and more. The Sifo-Dyas background came straight from Lucas, as did Sidious’s words to Dooku before the duel aboard Grievous’s starship. I had already been asked to create a background for Grievous, but I asked George for his thoughts, and was told to think of Grievous as a joint product of the Banking Clan and the Geonosians. Regarding the Battle of Coruscant, in my early outline I had Palpatine being moved about as President Bush was in Air Force One on Nine-Eleven. George said, however, that I should rework this along the lines of what the Secret Service did with Cheney, which was to get him to a hardened bunker. There were many other instances when I asked for his input, simply because I didn’t want to second guess him, or base my plotpoints solely on my read of The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones. I wish I’d been allowed to do more with Padmé, and to bring Dooku and Anakin within striking range of one another, but to do so would have trampled on lines in the final script. I also had to be very cagey about maintaining the Palpatine/Sidious illusion.
Why would anything be off-limits, if the EU were a seperate reality?Tasty Taste
Member Profile
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Date Posted: Jan 26, 2005 04:13 PM
are there anything still off limits to authors?
Yoda's species and homeworld and certain character's first names are still off limits. Episode III also makes mention of some things that the EU will not be able to go into at this point in time, if ever.
http://forums.starwars.com/thread.jspa? ... start=9240
Tasty Taste
Member Profile
Total Posts: 906
Member Since: 05/00
Date Posted: Jan 25, 2005 11:10 AM
More of the EU is based on Lucas's view of the universe outside the films than you are probably aware of. We just don't discuss it around here a whole lot.