10 Polarising Filmmakers Whom No One Can Agree On

By Richard John Dorricott /

1. George Lucas

How could anyone else top this list? George Lucas, the director of Star Wars: A New Hope and Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, is perhaps the most polarising filmmaker of all time. He€™s made three of the most beloved, cultural significant films, perhaps ever, and three of the worst, vomit-inducing travesties to have ever seen the light of day. Honestly, watching early interviews with Lucas, it can feel like you€™re listening to the words of an entirely different person. In the documentary From Star Wars to Jedi: The Making of a Saga, he talks about his passion for storytelling and his tentative relationship with special effects; he talks with passion about the magic of movies, his writing process and the way he approaches directing a scene. Flash-forward twenty years and Lucas has become unrecognisable to some people, people who see him as a corporate stooge with an overreliance on special effects, convoluted stories and flat characters. When Lucas sold the rights to Star Wars to Disney, there were some who were generally excited; in their minds, Lucas was an incapable creator who no longer understood the significance of his own creations.