Well, you're right about Lucas actually owning most of the films, in which he is virtually unique. (I'm not quite sure what legal the status of
Star Wars - which I refuse to call "Episode IV" - is. Unlike the later films it was not paid for by Lucas, because he didn't have the kind of money in those days. Did he actually buy it back from Fox, or does he just have
de facto control of it because he owns everything else?)
And if it weren't for those "addled French film critics from 50 years ago" promoting and practicing the practice of the auteur, the global and American film industries might never have accepted the likes of Kubrick, Scorsese, or Lee.
I have to disagree. I don't think the actual history of the industry supports you there. Certainly nobody in the
American film business was reading
Cahiers du Cinema or even auteurist-lite Andrew Sarris when the industry was changing in the direction that would benefit those three. The whole "theory" was essentially a way for French film critics to provide a theoretical
excuse and intellectual justification for their guilty pleasure - fairly mainstream American film. For such colossal snobs to simply
admit that they got a kick out of popcorn pictures - much less popcorn pictures from the capitalist-pig cultural backwater called America - would be unthinkable. No, they had to erect a completely bogus intellectual edifice - which unfortunately
directors the world over bought hook, line and sinker.
That's the real reason that folks like Kubrik, Scorcese and Lee were accepted. And they guy who blazed the trail for them wasn't French, he was English. His name was Alfred Hitchcock. He was much closer to the "author" of his pictures (since he worked closely with the writers on the script and storyboarded so extensively that the shooting process amounted to just transcribing his visual plan onto film.) Did you know that the so-called "possesory credit" ("A film by Joe Blow" or "A Joe Blow film") was supposed to be limited to Hitchcock under an agreement between the studios, the Writer's Guild and the Director's Guild, in recognition of Hitch's unique contribution to the overall storyline of his films, and the large amounts of action and dialogue that he, in effect, dictated during his brainstorming sessions with his the writers he collaborated with. (And, in a way, in gratitude for Hitchcock's not taking screenwriting credit, which he arguably could have, cutting into writer's fees and residuals.) The studios and the Director's Guild later violated that agreement and started "giving" the phony credit to directors who have a hard time writing their own names and couldn't tell a coherent story if caught by their wives in the hot-tub with their secretaries.
The fact is that changes in the structure of the industry, the collapse of the old studio system and changes in the financing and distribution of films let people like Kubrick, Scorsese and Lee make films that
made money and therefore got them a measure of control over their films. (Just as hugely successful actors have a degree of control over
their films that would have been impossible under the old studio system - including the right to approve and even fire directors.)
The auteurists had nothing to do with any of the
realities that brought this stuff about. Like most "social" (as opposed to scientific) theories it was a lot of hot air that had no practical effect on anything - except the egos of directors, the mendacity of studio heads and the thinking of critics and others who have
zero power or influence within the industry itself.
As for the troika you named, they also demonstrate the
downside of the "new" auteurist era - somewhere between a third and a half of their collective output is self-indulgent crap, and even their most technically brilliant films are often thematically empty. Amusing considering that the whole theory was erected on the films of men working within the strictures of the much-maligned studio system, who managed to make films nearly as "personal" as theirs while not being allowed to simply run wild.
Regards,
Joe