Sian Cain 

Long-lost Star Wars X-Wing model to be auctioned, bids starting at $400,000

Model of spacecraft used in 1977 Star Wars film was thought to be lost for decades, but was found in the collection of Oscar-nominated model-maker Greg Jein
  
  

A miniature model of an X-Wing Fighter used in the original Stars Wars film.
To be auctioned mid-October, the X-wing fighter from the original Star Wars film was found in model-maker Greg Jein’s collection. Photograph: Tony Gutierrez/AP

A long-lost model of an X-Wing Fighter that was used in the climactic battle in the original Star Wars film has been put up for auction, with bids starting at US$400,000 (£320,000, AU$625,000).

The 20-inch model was discovered in the collection of model-maker Greg Jein, who was nominated for an Oscar for his work on 1941 and Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Jein died in May last year, aged 76.

Built by George Lucas’ visual effects company Industrial Light & Magic, the model was used in the final battle, including the famous trench run, of 1977 film Star Wars: A New Hope. It is one of just four known “hero models” especially detailed for use in close-up shots; it has articulating wings, working lights and is marked with battle scars.

The model stood in for the X-Wings known as Red Leader, Red Two and Red Five, the latter flown by hero Luke Skywalker.

Jein’s collection – which also includes an original Stormtrooper costume from A New Hope, an astronaut suit from 2001: A Space Odyssey, Batarang throwing weapons from the 1960s Batman television series, and props from Star Trek – will be auctioned in Dallas on 14 and 15 October.

The X-Wing model has been described by Heritage Auctions as “the pinnacle of Star Wars artifacts to ever reach the market”.

Visual effects historian Gene Kozicki told the Hollywood Reporter the model was regarded as a “white whale” by those working in visual effects because no one knew where it was.

“For those of us that grew up in the 1970s or 1980s, and those of us that work in visual effects, this model is as significant a find as the ruby red slippers or the Maltese Falcon,” Kozicki said.

Kozicki was among a group of Jein’s friends and VFX professionals who found the model in a cardboard box while helping Jein’s family organise his collection. He said those in the room “knew immediately that it was the actual filming model and then the magnitude of the discovery started to set in”.

Kozicki said it was not known how Jein, who did not work on Star Wars, came to possess the model. He speculated it may have come into Jein’s collection during his time working on Steven Spielberg’s 1977 film Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which was made by many visual effects workers who also were working on Star Wars around the same time.

Jein’s collection catalogue is available online.

 

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