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The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.The story of the underappreciated bodybuilder, actor and Star Wars alumnus, David Prowse.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
Colm Meaney
- Narrator
- (voice)
Manuel Martínez Velasco
- Self
- (as Manuel Velasco)
Bob Prowse
- Self
- (as Robert Prowse)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Enjoyable documentary dealing with David Prowse , the actor who played the main villain, Darth Vader, in first Star Wars trilogy formed by : Star Wars, Empire strikes again, The Return of the Jedi. As his masked appearance marked his life forever and here fans and directors pay tribute to him . As David Prowse never revealed his aspect, and in this documentary we discover why the producers took that fateful decision. As, eventually, in The Return of the Jedi, something strange happened and David was replaced in the final scenes by veteran actor Sebastian Shaw as Darth Vader . It is set thirty years after, when David is an eighty year old actor, a retired bodybuilder, an old-age pensioner who comes to national and international coventions where fans pay agreeable homages .
This unknown and unappreciated actor called David Prowse had a long and unsuccesful career, starting in Hammer Films. There he played Frankenstein, as writer and director Jimmy Sangster met him in Harrods, London mall, where he worked as a gym trainer. As in 1969 Jimmy Sangster discovered him to play "Horror Frankenstein". David played for Hammer Films : "Vampire Circus" by Roger Young and "Frankenstein the monster of hell" by Terence Fisher. And, he even had a brief role without make-up, neither mask in the famous "Clockwork Orange" by Stanley Kubrick and following as a guest star in Benny Hill show . David went on performing adverts as a superhero in Green Cross . As well as he became the personal trainer for Christopher Reeve and his Superman film. However, his greatest hit resulting to be the Stars Wars evil Darth Vader embodiment, in spite of his face appeared totally masked.
In "I am your father" 2015 there are various hosts telling the shooting circumstances of "Star Wars" such as producers Gary Kurtz, Robert Watts, sound technician Ben Burtt, Lou Ferrigno of Hulk and actor Kenny Baker who performed R2-D2. This deserved tribute to David Prowse was narrated by prestigious actor/narrator Colm Meany and was well directed by Tony Bestard and Marcos Cabota.
This unknown and unappreciated actor called David Prowse had a long and unsuccesful career, starting in Hammer Films. There he played Frankenstein, as writer and director Jimmy Sangster met him in Harrods, London mall, where he worked as a gym trainer. As in 1969 Jimmy Sangster discovered him to play "Horror Frankenstein". David played for Hammer Films : "Vampire Circus" by Roger Young and "Frankenstein the monster of hell" by Terence Fisher. And, he even had a brief role without make-up, neither mask in the famous "Clockwork Orange" by Stanley Kubrick and following as a guest star in Benny Hill show . David went on performing adverts as a superhero in Green Cross . As well as he became the personal trainer for Christopher Reeve and his Superman film. However, his greatest hit resulting to be the Stars Wars evil Darth Vader embodiment, in spite of his face appeared totally masked.
In "I am your father" 2015 there are various hosts telling the shooting circumstances of "Star Wars" such as producers Gary Kurtz, Robert Watts, sound technician Ben Burtt, Lou Ferrigno of Hulk and actor Kenny Baker who performed R2-D2. This deserved tribute to David Prowse was narrated by prestigious actor/narrator Colm Meany and was well directed by Tony Bestard and Marcos Cabota.
I'm amazed by the low ratings and unkind reviews this documentary gets. It seems a lot of people didn't get from this documentary what they wanted, which is indeed different from what I felt the makers intended.
It's not only about 'the actor that played Darth Vader' or 'the man behind the mask', it is about a man who has worked six years on a job and did it extremely well, but who, till this very day, was not given the chance to finish his hard work to his own satisfaction, dictated by misunderstandings and prejudice with his employer. It is about how everybody sees this man deserves rehabilitation and recognition but does not receive it from his former employer.
Every good documentary has a story line: it has a starting point, often posing some sort of goal, a middle part where it is attempted to reach that goal, often with the introduction of a new set of problems that need to be solved first, and finally a conclusion, where the goal is achieved or where the gathered information raises new questions.
The dissatisfaction that you might feel about this particular documentary didn't come from the makers, it is just part of the story they tell. I might not be happy with the conclusion, but I am very happy I got to hear this story.
It's not only about 'the actor that played Darth Vader' or 'the man behind the mask', it is about a man who has worked six years on a job and did it extremely well, but who, till this very day, was not given the chance to finish his hard work to his own satisfaction, dictated by misunderstandings and prejudice with his employer. It is about how everybody sees this man deserves rehabilitation and recognition but does not receive it from his former employer.
Every good documentary has a story line: it has a starting point, often posing some sort of goal, a middle part where it is attempted to reach that goal, often with the introduction of a new set of problems that need to be solved first, and finally a conclusion, where the goal is achieved or where the gathered information raises new questions.
The dissatisfaction that you might feel about this particular documentary didn't come from the makers, it is just part of the story they tell. I might not be happy with the conclusion, but I am very happy I got to hear this story.
I have been a Star Wars fan my entire life and have never really thought about the man who was in the Darth Vader costume. This movie did a great job of telling his story and I'm really glad I watched it.
The directors of this documentary, who are Star Wars fans from his childhood, have done a good homage to actor Dave Prowse, the man behind the mask of Darth Vader.
Through several interviews with people directly involved in the making of the original Star Wars trilogy the film discovers the reasons that affected the relationship between Prowse and Lucasfilm after finishing the shooting of the original trilogy. Fortunately the film provides different opinions about this matter.
Last but not least, their homage also extends to other great film actors that played evil roles behind a mask.
Through several interviews with people directly involved in the making of the original Star Wars trilogy the film discovers the reasons that affected the relationship between Prowse and Lucasfilm after finishing the shooting of the original trilogy. Fortunately the film provides different opinions about this matter.
Last but not least, their homage also extends to other great film actors that played evil roles behind a mask.
Despite featuring some wonderful interviews and archival footage, I Am Your Father is ruined by the film-maker's senseless insistence on inserting himself into the film.
The film has a fascinating story at its heart - that of David Prowse, who played Darth Vader in the original Star Wars trilogy and remained remarkably unrecognizable despite playing one of the most iconic characters in all movie history.
Yet the central story - that of David's all too human journey and disappointment - is elbowed out of the way so the film-maker can indulge in some wish fulfillment.
While I understand the temptation for the film-maker to become his story, particularly given Star Wars' place in the Pantheon, the Michael Moore approach weakened the film and turned what should have been a richly poignant piece into just another ho-hum documentary. Pity.
The film has a fascinating story at its heart - that of David Prowse, who played Darth Vader in the original Star Wars trilogy and remained remarkably unrecognizable despite playing one of the most iconic characters in all movie history.
Yet the central story - that of David's all too human journey and disappointment - is elbowed out of the way so the film-maker can indulge in some wish fulfillment.
While I understand the temptation for the film-maker to become his story, particularly given Star Wars' place in the Pantheon, the Michael Moore approach weakened the film and turned what should have been a richly poignant piece into just another ho-hum documentary. Pity.
Did you know
- Quotes
David Prowse: I didn't know that I was Luke Skywalker's father until I went to the cinema and saw it in the movie.
- Crazy creditsThe views and opinions expressed in this documentary film are solely those of the commentators in it and do not reflect necessarily the view of the producers, actors or people involved in the production, nor imply endorsement or any affiliation with LucasFilm Ltd or George Lucas himself.
- ConnectionsEdited from Frankenstein (1910)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €250,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $4,338
- Runtime
- 1h 23m(83 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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