Some appropriately miserable news for your Tuesday ā the soundstage which played host to the production of The Empire Strikes back is closing down. More belowā¦
The soundstage which housed some of cinemaās most iconic moments, including the most shocking paternity reveal outside of a certain daytime TV personality, is set to close after 45 years at the forefront of visual effects.
Originally home to Industrial Light and Magic, the building in San Rafael, California is currently home to 32TEN Studios, another Disney-owned company.
In a statement to
ABC7 News, 32TEN said: ā32Ten is simply going out of business due to adverse business conditions including the declining use of miniature practical effects in film production, and also the halt in production due to the Hollywood strikes.ā
The buildingās landlord apparently wants the current tenants out by the end of October, and plans to repurpose the building.

Industrial Light and Magic made this whole T Rex while based in the building (Credit: Universal)
While the San Rafael building isnāt the first home of George Lucasā visual effects house (the company moved there during
Empire's pre-production in 1978) it saw the creation of many of the companyās most iconic and exciting set pieces before they relocated again in 2005.
That means the Kenner boulevard team oversaw a series of visual effects milestones, from cinemaās first entirely computer-generated character (the āstained glass manā in 1985ās
Young Sherlock Holmes) to the first use of motion capture to create a fully digital character (Jar-Jar Binks in
The Phantom Menace).
Taking to Facebook, 32TEN employee Scott Wickman said: āAlmost ALL of the effects, and numerous famous scenes, for
The Empire Strikes Back and
Return of the Jedi were created and filmed here. The list of other famous films that had moments filmed here, or had their practical effects done at the studio is massive;
The Rocketeer, Indiana Jones, Jurassic Park, Forrest Gump and
Back to the Future to name a few.ā
Wickman, along with colleagues Doug Cox and Sean house, are planning a crowdfunding campaign to keep the building from being repurposed. Hopefully, theyāll find some traction on that.
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