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The
Visual Development of Darth Vader
In The Secret History of Star
Wars, a crucial focus is the development and transformation
that the character of Darth Vader undergoes. This process was
described mostly in relation to the story itself, focusing mainly on
his characterisation, however at times it was necessary to dwell
upon his visual design as a way of drawing parallels to the story
function, for instance how his armored space suit was eventually
"retconned" to be made into a life-support device. Here, however, i
wish to talk in more explicit detail about the visual aspect, and
actually show this developmental process where possible.
Here we'll examine the early concept art, the creation of the
costume
and the subtle but
significant visual changes that slowly were wrought as the character and
story changed.
In the first draft,
Darth Vader is fairly inconsequential, and is merely an Imperial
General; most of his later traits are exhibited instead by Prince
Valorum, a Sith Lord who dresses in black robes and who speaks in
terse, no-nonensense phrases. Both of these characters are human and
generally unremarkable in the visual sense; no artwork was ever done
as far as i am aware. In draft two however, the two characters were
combined, and this is where the Darth Vader that we are familiar
with first becomes recognizable in prototype form. Ralph McQuarrie
had been hired to do sketches and paintings by this point, and one
of the very first characters he tackled was Darth Vader, who is a
highly memorable part of the opening sequence of the second draft
script. In that version, Imperial forces capture and board a ship,
much like the opening of the final film, with Vader and the
stormtroopers decending onto the craft and engaging in battle. The
notable deviation is that Deak Starkiller takes the role of Leia,
and he faces Darth Vader in a lightsaber battle before being
defeated and taken prisoner.
McQuarrie's earliest sketches depict a man
similar to Valorum or General Vader from the first draft, being tall
and with a flowing cape, however a distinguishinig feature is that
the character
wears what looks like a sort of futuristic gas mask over his
face. McQuarrie explains that it is a personal respirator, because the
character had to cross through space from the Imperial Stardestroyer
to the rebel cruiser. "Early in the script there was a description
of Vader crossing between two ships in space so i created this
mask so he could breathe in space," McQuarrie explains. "George
loved it." (i)
Hence we have the earliest
depiction of Vader, only now with a personal respirator
courtesy of McQuarrie.
It appears that McQuarrie began such sketches
while Lucas was in the midst of writing the second draft, because
the character is described in that script as wearing the respirator
mask that McQuarrie first sketched here. Following this, McQuarrie
made a number of alterations at Lucas' request. The robes became
more exaggerated, and the character was requested to have a
wide-brimmed samurai helmet, which McQuarrie combined with his
respirator to create a fearsome face-mask which completely obscured
the character's face.
This version is very reminiscent of a bedouin
warrior, especially prevelant in the first image above, and stems
from the opening sequence of the 1974 rough draft. In that scene the
Starkillers are hiding out on a barren desert planet when they
discover a Sith spacecraft has tracked them. They panic and begin
readying for a battle, but find no sign of the warrior. Suddenly,
a Sith knight appears and kills one of the young sons; the Sith
wears a facemask and is dressed in black robes. That scene and
the initial bedouin design is likely based on a memorable
scene from Lawrence of Arabia, a film that Lucas compared
Star Wars to more than once in 1974. In that classic film's
most gripping and strangely alien scene, P.T. Lawrence and his guide
trek across the desolate arabian desert and stop at a well. The
guide
senses something is
wrong and a figure appears on the horizon, slowly coming
into view as a black-robed figure riding atop a decorated
camel. The guide panics, knowing they will be killed but
before he can retrieve his pistol the distant figure
fires and kills him. The bedouin figure reaches Lawrence and dismounts
his black-adorned camel, revealing him as deadly and masked.

McQuarrie thought that Vader would look more
menacing if he was robed and
armored, and
so his next sketches reflected this more futuristic design. Lucas
also provided McQuarrie with comic books and 1930's pulp fiction
material to help steer the visual design. One of his
earliest designs in this new version had Vader linked more directly
to the stormtroopers, wearing a prototype stormtrooper helmet.

With the more angular and
science-fiction-based military look of the new armored version of
Vader, McQuarrie also made reforms to the mask, extending the face-grill
into a longer "snout" and exagerating the eyes.
This version shows the
influence of the comic book and serial references Lucas provided
McQuarrie, namely those of Doctor Doom, from The Fantastic Four, and
The Lightning, from the 1930's Fighting Devil Dog Serial. Doctor
Doom remains as a popular villain and so his similarities are
generally well-known:

The
villain Darkseid from another Jack Kirby series, 1973's The New
Gods, also bears a strong resemblance:

The Lightning however, remains more obscure, but
a startling similarity is present which surpasses even the Doctor
Doom influence:

With the Darth Vader
design more or less decided upon with the sketches shown a moment
ago, McQuarrie desided that it was time to depict the character in a
full-colour painting. He chose the lightsaber battle with Deak
Starkiller. Because McQuarrie gave Vader a respirator to allow the
character to survive in the vaccum of space, first when he crossed
to the ship and then during the scene itself which took place in a
vaccum when the hull was blown open, Deak also had to be provided
with a respirator, since the lightsaber battle took place in the
vaccumized corridor. Thus, we get the final production painting,
depicting the two masked characters squarring off with
lightsabers.

In draft two the
character of Darth Vader only had two scenes--the opening described
above and then the final space battle where he is killed--but since
McQuarrie had designed such an impressive villain, Lucas expanded
the character with much more screentime for the third draft. The
mask, of course, was not a permanent fixture, since it was merely a
respirator for the opening sequence--in one scene, Vader is
explicitly shown to have removed it, and drinks casually from a
flask. The frightening helmet would only be seen in the opening
sequence, and likely at the final space-battle sequence when Vader
pilots a craft; for the rest of the film, on the Death Star, the
character would simply be portrayed by the face of whatever actor
was cast in his role.
However, in the fourth draft, Lucas decided
that the character would be more effective if he wore the space suit
throughout the length of the film. This act, however, made the suit
seem as though it were a permenant encasement of
some kind. Lucas had come up with the concept of The
Duel by that point--Darth had a duel with his former master, Obi Wan,
and falls into a volcano, scarring him so disturbingly that he must
hide his features with the mask, much like Doctor Doom. "His face is all horrible
inside," Lucas says in 1977. "I was going to shoot a close-up of
Vader where you could see the inside of his face, but then
we said no, no, it would destroy the mystique of the
whole thing." (ii) In the film, the helmet was merely a decorative
piece, doubling as a space suit/ respirator. Here we see the helmet
being slipped onto actor David Prowse, comprising of two pieces, one
being the frontal mask and then a second piece for the flarred
brim:

The suit was meant to
be a well-worn armored space suit, which Vader had decorated with
his Sith robes, which cover much of the armor. The costume even has
scuff marks and a dull finish, being part of the "used universe",
indicating that Vader has had his suit for a while now and has seen
a lot of action with it.

However, the character and his design function
underwent a crucial transformation after the picture was shot. Ben
Burtt, sound designer, came up with a cold, mechanical breathing
sound that was constant and rythmic--the result was that Vader
appeared cybernetic in his presentation. Lucas liked this idea, and
in the experimental mixes Burtt took this concept even further,
adding robotic servos and experimenting with more labored breathing
sound effects--the weak rasping that Vader exhibits at the end of
Return of the Jedi
as he is about to die is,
in fact, a rejected variation from Star Wars .
Says Burtt: "The original concept i had of Darth Vader was a very
noise-producing individual. He came in to the scene, he was breathing
like some queezing windmill, you could hear his heart beating, he
moved his head [and] you heard motors turning, and he was almost
like some kind of robot in some sense. And he made so much noise
that we sort of had to cut back on that concept. In the first
experimental mixes we did in Star Wars, he sounded like an
operating room, you know, an emergency room,
you know, moving around." (iii)
Lucas had come up with a reformation of the
back story, now developing that Darth Vader was so injured in his volcano duel that
he was encased in the suit to save his life, with the
suit now a mobile life-support device, and that much of his body had been
destroyed, necessitating him to be rehabilitated cybernetically. This concept, of a character having
his limbs and organs replaced with cybernetics, was
a concept which Lucas had put into every single
ealier draft of Star Wars
except for the final; now he had a chance to bring it back. For
the sequel, Empire Strikes Back
,
Darth Vader was given a very subtle make-over to reflect this new
cyborg angle.
To
start, the eyes were coloured pitch dark, as opposed to Star
Wars , where they were
tinted a dark red
and became translucent when viewed at certain angles (see the previous
photos).Next, his armored breastplate was
moved on top of the inner robes instead of behind them,
emphasizing the armor and giving a slightly more robotic
look.

His
control box was also significantly overhauled. In Star Wars it
was merely a device to control his respirator, and was fastened with
straps similar to the ones the Rebel pilots use on themselves for
similar space-travel related matters. For Empire
, the box was instead more integrated into
Vader's body, and the "coin slots" were re-designed so as to look
more high-tech. Finally, blinking lights and LEDs were added. The
same facelift was given to the electronic devices on his
belt.

All
of these changes made Vader seem more high-tech, more electronic.
Finally, one of the more obvious facelifts was the finish of his
costume. In Star Wars
it was a well-worn armored space suit but now it was a sophisticated
life-support device, and thus it was made slick and shiny, polished
and clean.

The
voice of Darth Vader also underwent a change. In Star Wars Ben Burtt gave
James Earl Jones' voice a special processing or "flanging" to make
it seem muffled and processed inside the helmet, but for
Empire
this was abstracted even more, with a more prominent
"electronic" flange and a much deeper sound, both of which were
emphasized by Jones' robotic performance (as opposed to Star
Wars,
where he is quite expressive). It has also been said that Lucas
did not want the character to sound "black" and so James Earl Jones'
performance in Star Wars is much
higher-pitched so as to sound more "neutral"; in the sequels, Jones'
natural baritone would be used. Click
here
to listen to a comparison.
Finally, the world was given a
brief glimpse of the man underneat the helmet. "I shot this
scene very carefully," director Irvin Kershner says. "When the captain
comes in and Vader is sitting in his capsule with his back towards
us, all you see are scars on the back of his neck for a second.
I didn't want the audience to see anything else. I imagined that
beneath the mask Vader was hideous; his mouth was cut away and
he had one eye hanging low." (iv) Production art would
be produced for Vader's hideous face during the making of Return
of the Jedi
that reflects this depiction, but,
as Kershner describes above, it was decided that "less is more" and
the character is seen only from behind.

This brief glimpse was
also meant to show that, indeed, there was a human being underneath
the suit, in order to give more credence to the "Big Reveal" at the
end of the film.
A thorough examination
of this fleeting moment reveals an interesting thing which has gone
virtually unreported: Vader sits assisted by machinery, and although
the robotic arm that lowers his helmet into place is obvious, what
is less obvious is that there is a second robotic arm which is retracting an
external respirator. Shadows of the Empire developed that
this chamber was a "hyperbaric" medical chamber that allowed Vader
to breathe without his mask but this is based on an inaccurate
reading of the original scene. For starters, the egg-shaped chamber
is open when Captain Piet enters--is Vader holding his
breath? Shadows addressed this weird inconsistency
by imagining that Vader is experimenting with how long he can
survive in an "open" environment. The original
scene gives us an alternate perspective, instead
showing us that Vader has merely removed his helmet but still
must rely on an external artificial breathing device to
survive (the chamber itself is only referred to as a "meditation"
chamber). Piet enters, disturbing Vader, and the external respirator retracts
away and his helmet is lowered back on. Below
are screencaps of the scene, which give us only a brief glimpse
of the external respirator device (hint: it's the conical instrument which is retracting
behind the helmet).

A photo from the set
reveals the external respirator in full view. It is visible in its
retracted form on the upper left side of the
chamber:

This
external respirator originates
from the script itself, which specifically describes this detail. From
the shooting script:
Admiral Piett steps
into the room and pauses at the sight of...Darth Vader, his back
turned, is silhouetted in the gloom on the far side of the chamber.
A black, insect-looking droid attends him. Among the various
apparatus surrounding them, a respirator tube now retracts from
Vader's uncovered head. The head is bald with a mass of ugly scar
tissue covering it. The black droid then lowers Vader's mask and
helmet onto his head. When it is in place, he
turns.
Return of the Jedi gave us some slight
modifications as well, notably a further enhancement of the vocal
flanging to make it seem more processed and electronic than in
Empire Strikes Back, perhaps because the unmasking scene at
the end would reveal a design that shows that Vader's natural voice
is processed and amplified through an electronic system. The
unmasking scene required more development be done on Vader. Since
making Empire Strikes Back
,
Lucas had decided to turn Vader from a villain into a
sympathetic character, unmasking and redeeming him in the final drafts. Because he was
no longer a hideous monster, he was re-written as a "softer"
and more human character--one early draft had him scarred and with a
cloudy eye and a grey beard, but for the final version he was
turned even more sympathetic, instead presenting him as a pale old
man. This unmasking scene also necessitated a more elaborate
design of the helmet. It is revealed to actually be three pieces,with
the third piece being the actual mouthpiece which vocalises Vader's
speech and processes his breathing. The cybernetic aspect is
emphasized once again, with all sorts of vents, buttons and
technological pieces decorating the helmet. Below is the prop used
in this scene:

Contrast that with the crude and simple
two-piece mask used in Star Wars. Lucas also gave us
insight into the extent of Vader's internal cybernetic
re-construction--as Vader is being electrocuted, his skeleton is
made visible, revealing his legs and arms to be fully or partially
robotic, and his neck vertebrae to be artificial, perhaps explaining
his respiration dependence as due to complete paralysis. Dr. Curtis
Saxon has made an insightful
commentary
on this aspect. Below are
screencaps provided by him which illustrate these
things:

Finally, when it came time to making
Revenge of the Sith, Lucas had to make specific choices
regarding these elements that were previously only
hinted at. Firstly, it was revealed that all of Anakin's limbs are
artificial. Secondly, Anakin suffered no such paralysis in his
"volcano" tumble, and in fact he is quite easily capable of
breathing on his own, whether it is when he is clawing his way up
the Mustafar slope or when it is in the medical chamber. It is
strange that the film completely ignores this "iron lung" aspect,
which was originally the very impetus of the whole cybernetic
transformation. The novelisation, however, states that Anakin's
lungs were destroyed by breathing in the harmful super-heated gases
(one has to wonder why Obi Wan and Padme suffered no such side
effects despite only slightly less extreme exposure). In
the film, a large gap exists between the scene where the
medical droids begin work on him and the next time we see him, where
he is more or less completed and already in the suit. Such a huge
jump in time makes it seem as though Anakin has neither any
respiratory needs, nor has any integral cybernetic enhancements to
his organs or tissues, contrary to what Return of the
Jedi
implies. The emphasis
is instead placed on his horrible imprisonment, reflecting
the "tragic" view of Vader that the prequels show. We do, however,
get a brief glimpse of the inside of the helmet, showing us high-tech
HUD displays and a red-tinted electronic perspective
(similar to Terminator). Lucas had to also make a
decision on how to visually portray the Vader suit. Rather than
making a choice with chronological consistency in mind, in other
words going with the suit shown in Star Wars , Anakin was instead given the
cyborg-emphasized design of the later two sequels. This
design was given even more robotic overtones
however--the hand-sculpted mask of the original films was remade using a robotic
tool to ensure the mask was perfectly symmetrical.
The chestbox was now made to be fully integrated into Vader's torso, creating
a cyborg look. Finally, the helmet was made to connect
underneath the breastplate, instead of overlapping on top
as it did in the original films--this subtle but effective re-design
gave Vader a more robotic look.

Finally, Star
Wars was altered where possible to match the depiction seen in
the subsequent entries--James Earl Jones' voice was enhanced for the
2004 DVD release to sound more like the electronic version of
Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi and
Revenge of the Sith
.
For those wishing to know more detail about the
costume itself, Darth Blade's
Vader costume site is a great source of information, a truely
meticulous study on the Vader costume and its many variations used
in the films.
The Star Wars Technical Commentaries also has a
very well-researched article on The Injuries of
Darth Vader.
Dr. Saxon has also taken a look at the writing
inscribed on Vader's chestbox. A popular theory, one that Dr.
Saxon here tries to address, is that the writing is Hebrew and
speaks of sin and redemption. If that sounds a bit at odds with the
character depicted in the 1977 film, this is not surprising--more
recently, the leading theory has come about that the writing does
not say anything at all. Rather, it is merely a jibberish statement
which uses Hebrew as the basis due to its "alien" aesthetic
qualities (in a similar way that Huttese is based on real life
languages). "Darth Blade's" Vader costume page has a thorough debunkment of this
myth.
End Notes:
(i) The Best of the Lucasfilm Archives by Mark
Cotta Vaz and Shinji Hatta, 1994, p. 14
(ii) Rolling Stone, August 25th,
1977
(iii) Empire Strikes Back Definitive Edition
Laserdisk Interview, 1993
(iv) Annotated Screenplays, 1997, p.
165
04/02/07
All
images are copyright Lucasfilm. They are used under
the rights of fair use for educational
purposes
Web site and all contents © Copyright Michael
Kaminski 2007, All rights reserved.
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