I was 10, and Star Wars was the first movie I went to see unaccompanied by a parent. I don’t know if it was opening weekend, but I know it was a hot Memphis summer and the line stretched outside around the movie theater.
Smokey and the Bandit I saw because Mom & Dad took us to the drive in to see it.
Smokey wasn’t even on my radar then I didn’t see it until it was on HBO. (We got cable pretty early)
I was excited to see Star Wars since the moment I saw a commercial on our black and white tv. I know I wanted to see it right away but I didn’t on the opening weekend. My father tried to take us multiple times but there were always long lines and sold out shows. It felt like forever before we were able to see it. I have no idea how long it actually was. Hard to imagine now with multiplexes and reserved seating. I was ten when it came out.
I’ve never had the remotest inclination to go the movie theatres when large crowds / packed venues were to be expected. One always waits for new releases to age past their opening week crowds, unless it’s likely to slip away and disappear.
I saw Star Wars eventually, but I only went to a movie once on a holiday - for some stupid reason, we went to a Star Trek movie that opened one Christmas. I don’t even like Star Trek, but I was outvoted.
I was 16 and my high school nickname was ‘Queen of the Geeks’. These were the kids in 1977 who knew about computers, read science fiction, owned Bored of the Rings, and knew about Star Wars because they attended San Diego Comic-Con. They drove to my house on the way to the theater, pulled me into the car, told my mom they were taking me to the movies, and I had no idea what I was in for. I still remember how I felt in the first moments of the opening shot.
I was thirteen years old and in Jr. High that weekend. To the best of my recollection, I didn’t see any movies that weekend but I wasn’t an avid movie goer. I grew up in West Los Angeles.
I never saw Smokey and the Bandit and to this day know very little about it.
Star Wars was clearly on another level. I clearly remember my buddy Brian telling by the school lockers about this amazing movie that he saw. He couldn’t shut up about it. It may have been just after that weekend because I hadn’t even heard of it prior to that. Then almost overnight it was everywhere.
Being the contrary little punk that I was, I didn’t see it during the hype even though I was the prime age for it. I wanted to be the only kid not to have seen it. Before the second movie was released, they re-released Star Wars (with some edits?) in the cheapie theaters. My friend tricked me into seeing it.
Other than many snippets on tv over the years, that remains the only time that I have seen a movie from that series. I am largely ignorant about Star Wars lore and I miss a lot of references.
In June 1977, my father took us kids (relatively speaking; I was 23 years old, and my sisters were 24 and 16) out to Los Angeles to visit relatives out there. While we were out there, we saw Star Wars at a 1000-seat theater. The audience cheered and applauded when Luke blew up the Death Star.
To this day, I’ve never seen Smokey and the Bandit.
And I have no idea what I was doing that Memorial Day weekend. At the time, I was working a shit job in Hartford, CT.
I remember they referred to R2D2 as Artoo Detoo, and they did something similar with C3PO. (See-Threepio, maybe? Just my best WAG, 43 years later. :))
I saw both in theaters during their initial release, but I’m not sure which I saw first. What I do know is that I didn’t see Star Wars until it had been out for several weeks, so Smokey was probably first. I’m thinking neither was opening weekend though.
Now that I think about it, I remember one thing I did that Memorial Day weekend, and it had nothing to do with movies - a friend and I drove up to Boston that Saturday for my very first game at Fenway Park. This game. A perfect introduction to Fenway.
My Dad, my brother, and me stood in the heat for the first showing of Star Wars. We had a lot of excitement built up for it. I was 14 and a HUGE sci-fi fan. I don’t know how much the average teenager knew about it, but we were totally ready for it.
Star Wars. No question. I think I saw the original three times in its first release; I had zero interest in any Burt Reynolds movies back then (and very little now).
Saw Star Wars. I was six. I think I still have the program they passed out at GCC theaters. It had a faded purple font explaining who was who and what was what. Acting credits for Harrison was amusing, since it was pretty short and included soap operas.
I never have seen Smokey, probably never will. Can’t stomach more than a few seconds of Burt Reynolds. I remember seeing Star Wars in the theater, it was pretty cool but it wasn’t quite as mind-blowing for me as it seemed to be for most folks. I did see Spy Who Loved Me and The Deep at the cinema, and Food of the Gods the previous year. I was 9-10 years old. Seems like society’s standards have changed a bit for what it’s ok for little kids to see.